Thanks. As Chris stated, we had a total economic return for the quarter of negative 3%. It was a quarter of weak mortgage performance across the Board, especially in higher coupons. The rally in interest rates, combined with continued fast prepayment speeds resulted in our Agency MBS holdings underperforming their hedging instruments. For the year, Delta hedging costs have increased with greater interest rate volatility and there has been a further headwind to earnings. The challenges of the second quarter did not present the core earnings issue for us. In fact, our core earnings increased and we raised our dividend, but rather, our portfolio felt the impact through mark-to-market losses. Further, we don't see any Q2 agency underperformance as a result of some new or negative information about Agency MBS, but more as a result of the market continuing to digest existing news. By this, I mean, prepayment speeds running in excess of market expectations and in excess of many model projections has been a market reality for a few quarters now, not just the second quarter, but digesting that news gave the market indigestion this quarter. That said, I do think that the drop in interest rates surprised many investors. At the end of March, marketing consensus was overwhelmingly for continue to higher interest rates, driven by higher inflation reports. So, at the end of Q1, the market was shrugging off with faster prepayment speeds and the steeper S-curve meant for mortgage valuations because expectations were the continued increase in interest rates would make it uneconomical for many lower coupon mortgages to refinance. But the drop in rates this past quarter put faster MBS prepayments back in the spotlight. Meanwhile, another negative for the quarter was marginally reduced bank demand, possibly a result of lower yields and higher prices on MBS. We have talked on previous calls about how consistent bank buying has been a strong source of support for Agency MBS. Not surprisingly, that sport waned a little bit this quarter and was a negative technical for the sector. Fed messaging on tapering has been consistent and their words have been chosen very carefully this is not to ruffle the market's feathers. You know tapering is just a fancy word for buying less. The Fed is such a big buyer of MBS now, that even if they start buying a little less, their activities are still very supportive of MBS prices. People forget that during the Taper Tantrum of 2013, after an initial few weeks of underperformance, MBS wound up significantly outperforming treasuries that year. That doesn't mean to say that the Fed can't surprise the market with a tapering schedule that is more aggressive than expectations, but we do expect them to be supportive of Agency MBS in some form or fashion throughout at least mid-2022.