Yes. So as I mentioned – and Julia certainly should jump in here if she feels. As I mentioned, it is and always has been somewhat inconsistent, if you will, quarter-over-quarter because it is driven primarily by two things. One, dividends that we might take from our portfolio companies or receive from the portfolio companies, which is really dividends on usually the preferred stock investment that we have in those companies. And first of all, for a company to pay out a dividend to us, they also have to have what's called earnings and profits. So we generally don't see a lot of preferred dividends necessarily. Where you do see them more, as in the case of this past quarter with the exit of both, if you will, Frontier Packaging and the Old World Christmas recap, we are in a position then to have those companies as part of the transaction payout on the accumulated dividend that they would have. So that's one. So again, you'll see probably, as I say, less of that. And it's driven in part by exits that we might take going forward as well as any time the company has earnings and profits and they choose to pay out a dividend. So that's that part. And the other one is the other, what we call an exit fee or a success fee. Other folks would normally think of that as what's called PIK on their debt securities. And as you might know, we do not have PIK, which just means payment in kind, which is not cash related. We do not take it any income until actually the company is able to pay us that proportionate share of their "exit fee" or "success fee," which can occur during the life of the company, not necessarily just on an exit. And the reason a company would do that is it helps them from a tax perspective. So when they pay it out to us, we take it into income. And it is cash-based so we do not have any noncash income which obviously we would be inclined to have to – not inclined but we'd have to be required to pay out. So long answer to it but the answer is really, we look at it, as I mentioned, on an annual basis. And between quarters, it will be inconsistent but we try to manage to a level where we can generate another income line item to help support the nature of our interest income line item, which comes off of the debt securities because remember, we have – about 70% of our assets are in roughly in the debt securities of these companies and about 30% in the equity, which is important to us and is a part of our strategy. So we look to generate income from that from time-to-time. And then we take cap gains obviously going forward. Hopefully, that helps.