Yes. Sure, Carl. Thanks for the question. A couple of things. To most of the industry observers, it's no secret that M&A activity has picked up. There have been, I don't know, Carl, on my count, 4 or 5 deals where -- involve public companies in the last 6 or 9 months. There's a deal in Texas, at least 1 in Tennessee, Indiana, a couple of others. So the velocity is picking up. We, as you'd expect took a look at many of those. We look at most of the transactions that are in the marketplace. The broker community certainly understands that we're -- our strategy, and we're one of the calls.
We've got to look at a couple of other things that we've got to look at, the market, the geography, the footprint, the size, the consideration. We'd like to use our equity as much as we can to structure our cash and our capital, because we have to keep the M&A -- or the organic engine going just as much as the M&A side. Definitely more activity. Valuations, we don't get a ton of color on them. You can back into it, when some of our peers filed the transactions and evaluations, not surprisingly, have increased.
And then the last thing for us that's really important is we always need to go into these with a solution for the land ahead of time. We are -- the land-light strategy for us is nonnegotiable. So if it's a traditional builder with a lot of lots in the balance sheet, we need to have a solve for that.
And when we go back to some of the prepared comments, having that strategic partner now in place on the land bank side and beyond that, multiple conversations with a number of providers, I think positions us well at the point of sale to address that early and efficient -- more efficiently going forward.
But more deals, valuations are up, and I don't see that really slowing down. We were out at the Builder 100 Conference this week and you may have seen, we were fortunate to win the Builder of the Year award this year, so we were out accepting that. And a lot of discussion around M&A at that conference. And so I think the color there suggests we're going to see more of the same for the foreseeable future.