Mike, I'll answer first and then Ryan will tell me whether I got this right or not. My expectation is the margins will trend more to where they have been historically. We have different businesses operating. We certainly have an expectation that the private banking margins will improve over time. That's really what Sanjay has been working and his team are working on kind of resetting the business, bedding down the kind of revenue picture on the client side and making some progress on the spending side. So there's certainly expectations for us that, that business will -- has been reset in the late stages of being reset. And as we grow it, we'll capture more margin. The IMS business, I think you'll see everybody is on the call, they can comment as well after I'm done. That business is kind of a mid-30s, 34% to 36% margin business. Typically, when it's creeped up to the high 30s, that's more of an anomaly than kind of how we see the business operating. And we expect the margins to kind of be in that 34%, 35% range over time. And these are all market neutral comments. So Investment Advisors, I think, is one area where we're going to be consolidating the AMD, the asset manager distribution components of revenue and profits with the adviser channel, that will have a dampening effect on the margins just because of margins in the asset management distribution business and the types of clients we serve there in the global nature and how we report revenue and expense in that business because the sub-adviser cost for the non-U.S. assets are an expense item on the P&L. That runs at a lower margin business than adviser business has run historically. So that will have a little bit of a dampening impact just on the math corporate margins, it should have an impact. But there, given the mix of business over time, as Wayne talk about some new types of products and capabilities of strategic asset offer versus mutual funds as a straight-up product, the margins on those products, as well as selling custody-only assets onto the platform with a lower price point. We always expected the margins in that business to contract slightly, but with an expectation that it will be a much bigger business. So kind of higher dollar profit, slightly lower margins. And then couple that with the institutional business, which has always been a high-margin business. But with the compression of revenue, and as I mentioned and Paul has mentioned many times, the pricing competitiveness in the market, while that's been kind of a 50%, high 40s percent margin business, their margins will probably track a little bit over time, but with market success, again, dollar profits should improve. So overall margins, I would expect them to be kind of in historical ranges, but for different reasons than maybe they have been in the past.