And we don't talk enough about the bank. But on the first part, Hal, I mean, you've hit the nail on the head. Look, if you control or have that customer relationship, and let me just point out one thing, and then I'm going to answer it specifically, but I hope you and everyone who's read the letter, watching us understands the power of instant decision. Okay? Instant decision applies to factored carriers only. We will offer LoadPay to any carrier. And someday, we will offer LoadPay to enterprise carriers, I suspect. But let's just stick with that just for a second, because I think it's important to understand. Instant decision means just what it says. We've built a model that ingests data and can make an instant decision without human intervention on whether or not we would purchase this invoice, right? And that's never been done before, I mean, generally, you're touching it, people are touching it. I can't speak to what every factoring company does, but I know at scale instant decision, making decisions in less than 30 seconds. And we're doing that based upon giant data sets. We know what that account debtor has done before. We know what the prior invoices that come from that carrier look like. We know all these factors and our own proprietary risk model that we've built through the school of hard knocks that Kim, I, Tim, others have seen all the different ways in which you can get hurt. But if you make an instant decision on a Saturday, and you don't fund until Monday or Tuesday, that's like winning a race. And then after you win the race, them telling you that they're going to mail you their trophy and your winnings. You lose that instant gratification, like what was the value in making an instant decision if you can't fund me instantly. And so the power of LoadPay and the reason I think adoption will be so strong, because we're offering it to other factors as well, right? It's not branded with Triumph's name on it, is the ability to get money instantly sort of this Amazon, what Amazon has created for us, this expectation that we get what we order right when we want it, and it doesn't matter, the rules of nine to five don't apply. So now the money sits in the LoadPay account, it gets there in, in that example I gave you in the shareholder letter in less than a minute on a Saturday of a holiday weekend. Never been done before. So once the money is there, of course, we would want that carrier to spend money on the embedded debit card. That's great. We get interchange fees. You've already alluded to that. Of course, we'll generate the float. If they decide to use push to debit and move that money to another account, there's a fee associated with that, that's great. But you alluded to something, I mean, one of the things that freight brokers have not enjoyed doing and factoring companies have solved a little bit of this problem for them, and this is over the last decade, is advancing a percentage of the line haul, that's what we call it. What the carrier is getting paid, advancing a percentage of the line haul so that, that carrier can buy fuel before they pick up the load. Call it a fuel advance, whatever you want to call it, that has historically been rife with fraud, right? It's just there's risk because you, the load hasn't been moved yet. If you have all the data we have and you have a LoadPay account in someone's hands the ability to do in advance, whether the broker does it, whether we do it, I mean, all this can be negotiated with our partners, but to be able to do in advance into that account and have the data we have, which tells us, frankly, far more about the veracity of that carrier than a FICO score ever would, then now you've got an advanced product embedded in that solution, which now that's, of course, left-hand side of the balance sheet revenue, but it's still very, very profitable. And so you should expect that and several other things are in the future feature sets that we intend to roll out for LoadPay. And I would expect most of that gets rolled out in 2025.