A couple other examples would be useful to understand some of the segmentation that we've been discussing. Take, for example, Cadre. Cadre allows for the buying and selling of multifamily real estate apartment buildings, for example, as well as commercial real estate. The idea here, once again, is sourcing deals for accredited investors and institutions. Again, accredited investors are generally defined in the US as those that have a million dollars in invested capital. Historically, it's also referred to those who have, let's say, individually, $200,000 of income over the recent multi-year period and the expectation of having that going forward. Accredited investors are interesting because under the Jobs Act, Jumpstart Our Businesses Act, that arose from the Dodd-Frank set of regulation changes post-financial crisis in the US have highlighted accredited investors as being those who can transact on platforms. Here, Cadre is reporting to try to lower fees, lockups, and so on, for investors, providing greater liquidity than private equity. Interestingly enough, Jared Kushner is one of the founders of Cadre. Top Line Venture Capitalists put up around $133 million at an $800 million valuation cited early in 2019, including Thrive Capital and Andreessen Horowitz. Another startup, Fundrise, which received just under $60 million of funding from Renren, Guggenheim Partners, and other investors, institutional investors, presented a crowdsourcing platform for portfolios of different kinds of real estate. Not limited only in this case to accredited investors with a minimum investments of $500. A democratization of real-estate investing for those who have small amounts of capital. Aggregating at around $2.5 billion worth of invested real estate with a recent evaluation about $800 million. Part of a disruptive, let's call it, again, a democratization of what has been historically a much more private investor orientation in commercial investment. Another one is Cherre, which is along the AI vector in FinTech, data aggregation, but also an analytical data visualization firm. That puts together and provides analysis on thousands and thousands of public private and internal data sources for clients. They received a small round recently, about $9 million, 15 investors, including hedge funds, venture capitalists, and so on at an unknown valuation. Again, applying the latest, reportedly, artificial intelligence technologies to data in the commercial space, which is so critical for those actors who are buying, selling, leasing, or brokering commercial real estate.