Yes. Great. So let me try to handle those in reverse order since I’ll remember them better. But let me talk first about crypto, which we had started talking about maybe 2 years ago. And then unfortunately, you had a lot of disruption in the market to put it mildly with FTX and some of the other bad actors in the marketplace. And so volumes dramatically declined, as you are aware. There is still significant interest in the asset class. You can look at like the closed-end fund rate scale and the amount of volume, if you will, that it does in the amount of bitcoin in its corpus and so if you assume that sometime between today and January 10, which I understand is sort of the drop dead date with respect to SEC approval, given what happened in the District Court, the lost by the SEC, there is going to be, I would think, a significant influx of interest in the ETFs that are kind of queued up. I think there is 10 to 12 of them. Some of the big names, BlackRock, etcetera, have proposals on the table Schwab. And we are an AP with each of those, 10. And I think there is going to be a significant amount of trading from the closed-end fund that will migrate, if you will, to these other funds. It’s just kind of the natural fluidity people will move to lower fee TFs were moved because it’s part of another portfolio or they get an offset whatever it is, I think they’ll be kind of almost letting the air out of the balloon kind of effect of all of that. But once people can look at a price on a screen and say, okay, I know that, that is one, the price of a Bitcoin or Ethereum or whatever the product is within an ETF, and it’s traded in a product that’s listed on a national security exchange that Century cleared. And I know there is not going to be a shenanigans because we have a proper regulatory environment, people are going to get a closing price, etcetera, we think then you can see a significant increase in real retail and even institutional volumes, and that’s what we’re setting up for. In addition, as you know, we’ve partnered with Citadel, Schwab and Fidelity and some others to create a platform called EDX, which would be a front through back custody and clearing solution and execution. So there will be spot venues that will emerge in addition to that, ErisX, which is now owned by CBOE, has a great platform. So there will be real volumes and we will see a marketplace that we all kind of know and understand unlike as Guntzer [ph] said, a little bit of the Wild West that we have dealt with historically. So that’s why I’m very happy we made the investments that we did a couple of years ago, and I think we’re very well positioned to be a significant market maker in this asset class. With regard to ETF Block, again, this is something we’ve been talking about for the last couple of years. In terms of regions, we’ve really focused this year on Europe, in particular. We think there is significant opportunities. Obviously, there is a number of large competitors there, Flow Traders and others. We’ve done all of the hard work in terms of pricing the products, both domestic and international products, which we’ve gotten better at and fixed income products in that region. We have distribution in that region because of the ITG acquisition, right? So we have connectivity to both the RFQ platforms, but more importantly, end users in that marketplace know who we are because of the ITG Virtu relationships both in the UK and on the continent. So we have distribution there as well. So we’re very excited about that. As we’ve also talked about the synergy between what we are doing in credit and rates like being a market maker for the first time in those products enables us to be, we think, a significant contributor to being a market maker in ETF fixed income products. Obviously, there is a lot of incumbents there, Jane, Flow, etcetera, Citadel that do an excellent job, but we do think there is room for Virtu. And then finally, with respect to options, I think we’ve been somewhat validated, if you will, with regard to our approach to attack the big index family. I saw some information just in the last day or 2 about the explosion of growth in index volumes. And that’s really been our big focus and single name index options have – volumes have significantly dropped off. Again, we are trading single name options, we will continue to do so. Whether in 2024, we start taking directed flow from retail brokers or not is still an open question in my mind. It’s probably not – given what’s happened with the shift of volumes, it’s probably not a significant priority at this point, but something we will get to.