Sure. I’ll take a shot at that. So I think that when we look at our recurring dividend, we say, okay, what is our – where do we – how do we feel about our recurring EBITDA? And obviously, we added to the recurring side of the business with the brand business. We’ve had growth in a number of our other businesses. And at some point, unless you are – you’ve seen this for a long time, at what point do you say brokerage or retail is not completely episodic, and there is a recurring nature. We’re always trying to measure those things and be careful about it. But I think from our perspective, that – the recurring part, which is getting nicely over $100 million of EBITDA, provides a really good floor and pays for a lot of our interest and a lot of our dividends, and then there’s other pieces, we’re just always trying to manage. And as you go back just the last five quarters, you’ve got operating EBITDA of $43 million, $35 million. And then I don’t know what you want to do with Barneys, we’ve talked a lot about that. But even Q4 2019 where you had $16 million, you had a $50-plus million loss in Barney. So the real business that isn’t such a onetime hit that over $70 million in that quarter and then $70 million in Q1 and $46 million in Q2. So you’re going back six quarters, and you could go a little bit further, where you’re getting a sense that some of those episodic businesses are a little bit more recurring, it gives you more confidence. And what is the right number to annualize? Look, we ask ourselves that question every day. I mean we start-up over every quarter, but we feel really good from where we’re starting. And I would say – I don’t know that I’d sign up for a $250 million annualized run rate. But I will say the run rate gets higher and higher as we build out the business, and it’s definitely starting from a high level. As it relates to the dividend, we’re still going to do the onetime dividend. That’s a – that was our kind of commitment to our original shareholders and it’s a commitment to our current shareholders is that [indiscernible] the money. We ask a lot of our shareholders. We take a lot of discretion. And as part of that, our discipline is going to be to pay back a meaningful portion of our EBITDA back to the shareholders, and that’s been about 20%, 25%, and we don’t plan on changing that.