Thank you. So, if I understand what your question is, it's about how to increase the profitability of the Consumer Beauty division. So, Consumer Beauty division is two stories, if I may say. There is Color Cosmetics on one side and then massive fragrances on the other side. The first information that needs to be known is that, it's, we see really diverging trends. With Color Cosmetics under pressure, we know the declines of this market both globally and in the U.S., but what we see is at the same time, the massive fragrances are really continuing to grow high-single-digits, sometimes double-digits growth, and this is really what we are trying to pivot now, since 1.5 year, accelerating in fiscal '25, which is reflected in the figures that you saw during the presentation. So, the Color Cosmetics category per se is when you look at the gross margin of this category at Coty, it's quite high, in terms of gross margin. So, it's really something that is not a big difference versus our peers who are more exposed to skincare, hence higher profitability in this kind of mass market division but if you compare Color Cosmetics to Color Cosmetics, we are quite close to our competitors. The thing that happened is that when we started as a team in 2021 to reposition the division, we had to reinvest in building an innovation pipeline, in increasing marketing spend, in strengthening brand reach relevance equity, stabilizing the distribution, which led to investments that really weighed on operating margin for some time. Importantly, what we saw is that we had tangible results for this Color Cosmetics category. First, with a stabilized shelf space and second, with probably the strongest brand equities in many years in this division. At the same time, the market has continued to evolve, and we've seen the rise of indies or dupes, depending on how they are positioned, which at the end of the day did not grow the full market, and that's what I did say, last quarter is that, this Color Cosmetics market in mass market needs to be a story of legacy, plus indie rather than just a story of indie, who are failing to grow the total market. So, on this side, what we are doing on the Color Cosmetics part is that we are making our efforts even more granularly decisive, meaning that we've made a lot of studies to understand what are the lever that can support totally the brands with the highest return on investment, which really allow us to free some resources to put them behind mass fragrances, which are by the way are much more profitable with gross margins, much higher than Color Cosmetics. So, that's the key shift that we are operating in this division, still continuing to do the right things behind Color Cosmetics, while freeing investments to support what is growing and what is much more profitable for us, which is mass fragrances. To finish on this, I can give you one good example of what we have done with Rimmel in the UK, which is a very interesting example of what is the right playbook to be successful in this business. So, on Rimmel in UK, we have put in place a combination of number one innovations that were Prestige inspired, if I may say. I'm thinking about the LEAP butter. I'm thinking about the multitasker concealer, which went very, very strongly viral and also benefited from very strong always on influencer content, organic consumer content plus advocacy, activations using TikTok Shop for the first time, which led to a brand halo and a strong momentum on Amazon. Altogether, this required less investment than the classical launches we were doing before. But at the same time, they allowed us to stabilize the market share of the brand in the UK, for the first time in three years. So, at the end of the day, we feel that we are finding the right recipe to support Color Cosmetics with a little bit downsized investment, while having better results, while we're investing behind the mass fragrance category. Then there was a second question around promotional environment. Laurent, you want to take it?