Yes, I’m going to ask Chris to actually talk a little bit more broadly about the big market opportunity in front of us, but I think--I just want to remind all of you of another important thing that has occurred with Royalty Pharma that is fairly unusual, which is that we have a massive, massive shift in the shareholder base from the legacy shareholders we had and were our partners for 20-plus years when we were private, to the new current shareholder base we have. A lot of the investors we had in Royalty Pharma that grew with us and supported us and were incredibly loyal over more than 20--really, 24 years, since ’96 to 2020, were kind of individuals, family offices, many of which when they invested were people I actually approached and they trusted in us and the business model, but then the shares went to second and even third generations, and they were split in many of those investors groups into many different hands. Also, there was a very large component of investors that were foundations, endowments like Harvard Management Company, Columbia University endowment, Boston University - many of that nature, some foundations like the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and others. We go public in June of 2020 and many of those investors, having been in the stock for over two decades and having achieved very, very significant value creation, have sold their shares, and specifically the endowments and foundations. We went from them viewing us as a manager that they could allocate capital to, and actually did so - every time we raised money, they would invest more because of the very strong performance, to now becoming a stock. As you know, university endowments are not stock pickers - that’s not their business. We don’t fit any box in those kind of investors’ portfolios, so when we became public, they had to sell. They had to sell because it’s not their business to be actually investing in specific stocks. They allocate money to managers that do so. So we had this massive shift in the shareholder base where over 62%, 63% of the shareholders changed hands, and then in addition to--just to give you a sense, 62%, 63% have sold, which meant that we had to replace $16 billion or so of capital with new investors. We’ve done that over the last three years, so we had this very significant headwind of just constant turnover and selling of shares. That’s behind us. Then the remaining ownership of 32%-ish is owned by management and the board, so I think when you add those two numbers, 62, 63 and we’re close to 95%, so all of that is now behind us, and obviously what we need to do now going forward is to start to cultivate many other investors that I think we believe will Royalty Pharma as a very attractive investment proposition, many generalists in Europe that could see an investment in Royalty Pharma as a way to invest in the cutting edge of biotech innovation in the U.S., life sciences innovation, and that’s something we’re committed to do over the next few years. It takes a lot of work because we’re an N of 1, so we need to educate investors about our business model, what’s unique about it, and the very, very strong performance that it can achieve, that we have achieved already since the IPO. We can talk more about that later, but I’ll stop there. Chris, maybe you want to talk about other aspects about the big opportunity we have ahead of us?