On the two things that we are paying the most attention to, I think one would be the issue I just described: any transmission between the more traditional financial sector and the cryptocurrency sector.
The other one is consumer protection. Particularly in Canada, I think, if a business tells you, look, we're going to put your money in custody and it's going to be there so that you can trade and make payments, you are used to having some assurance around that being a regulated form of business.
These businesses tend to look a lot like things that are regulated, and they pitch themselves as things that Canadians are used to being regulated. Our concern would be that consumers don't understand the risk they're taking. They don't understand the degree of speculation in this business and, as you pointed out earlier, may suffer losses.