Yeah. Hey, Betsy. It's Mark. I can take that. So thanks for the question. I guess, you know, first, I would note, in thinking of our NII guide, I just maybe as background, remind folks that we're coming off two consecutive years of record NII growth. Including last year, you know, in 2024, we grew NII by 6% year over year. So it's a pretty high stepping off point. And our outlook is to be basically flat to a record year plus or minus low single digits. So that's kind of the frame. You know, maybe I'll go back to how I framed it in January and give you a sense of the, you know, roughly four buckets around how we think about our NII guide, and you know, there are two potential tailwinds around loan growth and investment portfolio rollovers. And then there's two potential headwinds, you know, the rate environment and deposit mix. And, you know, I use potential because some of those can become tailwinds as well depending on, you know, macroeconomic kind of development. So, you know, first deposit levels, so let's take the headwinds, and I mentioned this a little bit around non-interest-bearing, but, you know, deposits were seasonally high coming out of Q4. You know, they did moderate as expected in January, so we did see a kind of usual seasonality to it, but they did bounce again late in the quarter, and you're seeing that. I mentioned that $240 is probably a better range for you to think about our client deposits. It's still early, but I mentioned that we've seen pretty strong deposit levels so far. While we did see non-interest-bearing, you know, decline in the quarter, you know, at a current rate environment, you know, a billion of non-interest-bearing is worth about $10 million a quarter to us. So if, you know, if the non-interest-bearing decline, you know, flattens out or we see a favorable deposit mix, that would certainly be supportive of NII. You know, on the rate side, you're correct. We're using, you know, market forwards, and those are certainly moving around, including, I'm sure, from the news yesterday. So we're basing us right now. We're basing it on our market forwards. And if inflation accelerates, and central banks start to pause, you know, that would be incrementally positive for NII, you know, particularly as I've talked about in non-US. We're pretty neutral around US rate changes. And maybe I'll just, you know, reiterate again that, you know, for both the ECB and, you know, Bank of England, you know, that's worth roughly $5 to $10 million per cut per quarter, you know, in our non-US business. So, you know, and then finally, if long rates hold up, you know, and we've seen those move around, if those stay elevated, that would also be, you know, supportive of NII, you know, and vice versa. And then we talk about loan growth, you know, tailwinds. So our, yeah. We remain focused on delivering solid loan growth as we've talked about. That's embedded in our outlook. And then investment portfolio rollovers would be the final bucket in terms of how we think about our guide. And we've talked about roughly $4 billion a quarter. It can be lumpy, but $4 billion a quarter. You know, given we've done a couple of portfolio repositionings, and the pickup there is roughly 100 to 150 basis points. So, you know, hopefully, that gives you a sense of the, you know, various component parts where we can see, you know, potential to get up, you know, on the plus side and also, things that could move us a little bit why we're staying, you know, plus or minus low single digits. So hopefully, that's helpful. And we still think our guide is reasonable and achievable for the year, and we'll see how things develop.