Well, I would say this best. We used to own to lot of ARMs. For a while we thought they we very cheap. Cheaper then fixed-rates and they are great. This a prior are great risk asset, right because there’s shorter duration and they start turning into a floater after a certain number of years. They reviewed to hedge, but then what happened is, at least the way do you look at the world is that, they got very expensive into a logical asset for banks to buy, and banks recovered from 2008 and they were basically funding themselves at zero as deposit. So they were the marginal buyer, and that’s all that we’ve couldn’t really effectively compete with them. We didn’t see expect to returns on that to us looked as compiling as the fixed rates. Given that for the fixed rates you can put on hedges that are very tightly correlated and you run your portfolio as being long convexity and the way that you can’t from the ARMs right. And the thing of that the ARMs is that, they are relatively a liquid, in some ways they are not that much more illiquid than non-agencies. There was a big widening, we’ve start to look at them again, we thought just a very small amount. I think it’s a little frustrating in getting invested in that sector, because they still only represents may be 3% to 4% of new production in the agency market, so they’re small. But yeah we keep our eye on them, we can get to our target level, we would definitely buy more it’s just difficult to get investment. But the one thing I’m mindful of is that, they aren’t nearly as liquid you’re going to take, even though they are shorter rate duration, they are going to have a lot more tracking area versus their hedged being pools versus TBAs, they won’t have much tracking or fixed rate pools versus swaps. And I would say that the rich posturing from the investment banks and how they trade them is I don’t see them wanting to take large positions on them one way or another, which means, if you want to move that portfolio around, it can come at the expense of the price execution you get. But no, I mean, they have widen to those point where you think they look attractive, lets say we bought a small amount you would look to add more, it’s just sort of a painful process to be able to get invested in them.
Douglas Harter – Credit Suisse: Great, thank you for that color.