Well, I’d say you have to start out asking two questions. Number one, when you say replacement costs, can these assets be replaced? And I know this is for many of you and for you John. This is repeating something you guys already know. But these markets were downzoned, all the way back in 1986. Essentially, what that means is that barring you, [ph] with property, even all the changes and everything that went into place is, most buildings are larger than if you were to build a new building on that site that you could build. So, most of the buildings we’re buying, when I say most, it’s pretty much all. So, if we’re buying a 200,000-foot building on a site in Beverly Hills and then we just want to go down to the third and say now what can we build there. It’s likely that they would let us build like a 40,000-foot building. It was a dramatic downzoning. A lot of prices were zoned 8 to 1, 9 to 1, 10 to 1 and now for pretty much the whole place it’s 1.5 to 1, okay. So, when you say replacement cost, I think intrinsic in that question is someone going to build a building cheaper near you as a competitor? No, they are not, okay. The second thing when you asked about replacement cost is replacement cost is a tough number because when rents are high, land goes up and therefore replacement cost goes up. And when rents go down, land value goes down and replacement cost goes down, only for the land component, right. So, I don’t think that you could replace any of these buildings and then taking just replacement, flat out, I don’t care how much money you want to spend, I only care replacement. And then now go to the next step, which is if you were to try and do some kind of a component analysis and say what are construction costs and what does land cost, where land is selling at a very higher premium right now in the markets that we’re buying it, absurdly high, absurdly high on an FAR basis. So, I suspect if you really were to say, I know that Douglas Emmett as far as 200,000-foot building on Ocean Boulevard and Santa Monica, I am not going to go buy enough land to build 2000,000 feet. I think when you are down, we probably come half the replacement cost because the land would be so absurdly expensive to get that much land. Now with that said, construction costs have also gone up but they’re not super meaningful to this -- to this equation, it’s mostly the other things that I mentioned.