Yeah. So, thankfully, on tariffs, there's very limited exposure. You know, those tariffs are usually around, you know, offshore manufacturing. It's a little bit of it, but it's not really that material. And given the tariff maneuvers during the prior Trump administration, many of those companies already kind of proactively moved to Vietnam or India or Mexico or other places outside of, you know, the Far East. So tariffs are kind of, you know, back again, but many of our companies, you know, kind of took proactive action, and those companies are a relatively small part of the portfolio. Our two biggest industry groups are healthcare, number one, and government contracting and defense, number two. Healthcare is the largest piece of the US economy. It's over 20% of the US economy. It's the largest piece of our portfolio. As you know, we tend to focus on companies in healthcare that are on the right side of providing cost savings. Because if you're, you know, reimbursement risk is always a risk in healthcare. So one way you deal with that is you back companies that are delivering cost savings and still delivering high-quality care. So we think we're well-positioned there to weather anything that is thrown at us because we're backing companies that are reducing costs, they're gonna win. Same thing on government contracting. You know, a lot of the government contracting are, I'd call them people businesses where people walk into offices, they sit behind computers, and they could be doing cybersecurity. They could be doing satellites. They could be doing intelligence. It's not very much in, you know, tanks and missiles and things of that nature. And again, most of these companies are on the right side of either technology upgrades and or reducing costs. To drill down further, there's generally two types of contracts in government contracting. There's the cost-plus where the government's reimbursing for the cost of the team plus a margin. And in those cases, those EBITDA margins are typically under 10%. So it's not like any of those companies are making, you know, exorbitant profit margins in the cost-plus side. And then you have fixed-price contracts, which I think is where the world's probably headed. Where the risk is on the contractor to provide the service at a fixed price. And if they do it well, if they operate well, they're gonna make higher margins. And, obviously, if they don't operate well, they're gonna make lower margins or lose money. The piece of the portfolio that has fixed-price, you know, we believe are excellent operators. They're making very good margins because they're really excellent operators and are not gonna price a fixed-price contract unless they make sure it's judicious and careful. And also providing value to the government. So that's a long-winded answer, and we can go into more detail offline if you like. But largely, we think we're well-positioned. But we're watchful. And, of course, as taxpayers, we want the government to spend its taxpayers' dollars efficiently. So, you know, time will tell, but we believe we're on top of it.