Hey, Owen, this is Mark. If you recall, I think in the last two quarterly earnings calls, we were comfortable making comments. While we don't provide guidance, we were comfortable making comments about kind of the coming quarter, right? And as you recall, the third quarter historically has been a slow quarter for us when you look at patterns throughout a year. Typically, the summer months are a time when volume slows down. But as you can kind of see, in fact, trading volume increased significantly and in Q3. And you guys follow this stuff very closely, but obviously, the public markets performed very strongly in the first half. I think the main indices, S&P, Nasdaq and the Russell, hit their peaks in July. And we saw that momentum kind of carrying into the private markets. But of course, post Labor Day, as Kelly mentioned, with the Fed's discussion of higher rates for longer, with the war breaking out in October, it's as Kelly said, it's this balance of positive indicators in terms of IOIs and buy-side interest. And yet, we're very aware of the tenuous macroeconomic environment and kind of what's happened to public markets in September and October, right? And so two other things that I would mention, Owen, that we also watch very closely, and we've indicated are important factors in the return of the private market and probably talks about the grade reset. One is kind of the funding round activity that we see for private companies. This is information that you can see in our Forge Investment Outlook. But in Q3, roughly 6% of the companies that we track, and there's about 1,700 companies that we track for this, about 6% of those companies raised capital in Q3, about 18% of the companies that we track on a year-to-date basis. So while that's positive, it's still the minority. It says that still over 80% of the companies we track have not raised a new round in 2023. There's data in the FIO that shows that now the time between funding rounds has increased to 21 months, and so many companies are still kind of waiting to raise the next round. Those that do raise capital are those that can raise capital at a premium, with an average of a 20% premium over the last round. And then IPOs, right? There's been a number of IPOs that you've seen recently, with kind of a mixture of results. I think we believe that the great reset and kind of the return of the IPO market are also important drivers because they're particularly important to the private markets to show that companies can have successful exits and that private companies start to go through the great reset, and those primary funding rounds are an important part of price discovery, right? They give investors high confidence that valuations have kind of reset. So those are some of the other factors that I think we watch closely. And hopefully, that's helpful.