James Charles Zelter
Analyst · Vernon Plack with BB&T Capital
Yes. I think we've been consistent and we'll remain consistent in -- there's a range of levers that we like for this business. It goes from 0.5, 0.55, to 0.7, 0.75. We're on the outer edge of where we like to be comfortable and so that's why when we think about, again, in the broad response and the broad announcement today, because we have been approached and have been told that equity is an opportunity for us, that we wanted to make sure that we had talked about that. But certainly we, over time, would like to have our leverage closer to 0.65 or 0.6 to broadly take advantage of some of these opportunities and again, one of the things that -- it is all connected. One of the unintended consequences of having a very large liquid book is the volatility sometimes creates more leverage inherently as an unexpected result of market volatility. Same assets, marked down because of liquidity, your unintended consequences, your leverage goes up overnight. That's something that all the BDCs have to deal with. We happen to be one that because of the nature of our portfolio, I think we were more impacted by that. And if you recall a couple of quarters ago, our NAV volatility, quarter-over-quarter, where many of the BDCs were 1%, 2%, we were in excess of 15%. Now some of that is the market, some of that is result of our broad -- the breadth of our valuation process that occurs every quarter rather than just once a quarter annually, for many of our peers, but a combination of those 2 things creates an unintended consequence. So broadly speaking, we want our leverage to be between 0.5 and 0.75 or on the wider end of that, we prefer to be in the middle of that.
Vernon C. Plack - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division: Okay. And were there any nonrecurring items or sort of nonrecurring in the interest and dividend income lines this quarter?