Michael, it is Jim. I will start, and I am sure Kevin will add some color. We are really pleased with what has happened in that line item. It has been a focus, as you know, for the company for a number of years, and we started to see real progress beginning, call it, 18 months ago, even before we started to see the benefits from the merger with First, we could see it start to bend down. That has been a focus and remains a focus. In terms of where we go from here, as you point out, we hit our goals with respect to expense saves from First, so very pleased with that. I do not see a lot of savings associated with the merger from this point on; I think we have realized most of those expense saves. That is not to say that we cannot do more just as a company as a whole, but I think expenses that are truly related to the merger are pretty much in this run rate. Looking forward, there are a couple of things. We will have merit increases, obviously, in the second quarter, and there is a day-count factor as we look to Q2 and beyond. Those things will cause expenses to drift up moderately. The other variable is we have seen and are seeing opportunities to hire. As you know, there is a lot of dislocation going on in the marketplace, and we have seen that already and expect to see more of it. I would say that is the part of the picture on noninterest expense that will be a little hard to predict because, as Kevin points out, we see opportunities to be opportunistic and we intend to pursue those. From Q1, probably a low single-digit percent increase is a fair expectation, and that factors in some of the hiring Kevin is talking about, but that piece is tough to forecast. At its base, day count and merit are probably low single digits, and then we will see what comes from the hiring that will add to that.