I'll go first. I think on the liability side, we've got, obviously the unsecured notes the cost on that. And, then we have the revolver, we've increased, we've gotten some really strong support from our Banking Group. And decrease the size of that over the last two quarters, and obviously have a lot of capacity there. So kind of the next the next dollar that we need to borrow, we would borrow from LIBOR, which is LIBOR plus 200. So I think that's pretty solid. On the asset side, the last quarter, the yield was 8.7%, you saw the yield on the assets rolled off was, was obviously lower than that. So we don't Armen's point, I want to kind of predict what the asset yields going to be each quarter and what's going to roll off. But, if you look at what we did last quarter, and you will get, the other besides drawing the revolver, the other place, we go to fund assets, would be the seller, low yielding assets, and you just pick up a spread on the assets. So, if something comes off it at LIBOR plus, 500, 400 and goes on, LIBOR plus 700, 600, there's that spread. It's just it is hard to predict, kind of each quarter, what the -- what's going to be refinanced. We've seen more in the end of last quarter, and so far this quarter, there's been more refinancing activities as the market has been robust. So it's just hard to predict that because a quarter ago, we weren't seeing that and that will ebb and flow. But I think that gives you a sense, kind of what we're trying to do on the asset side in terms of new origination on the asset side in terms of selling the lower yielding assets. And then on the liability side.