this -- i totally make fun of jeff dunlap, 2.6%, well, he was right. you can see when we wound up hitting that level in breaking through, equity markets started rolling over, and the question becomes, lisa, when do yields get impacted enough to get the private investors coming back in and chill everything out? lisa: this is a complicated question. it sounds simple, but it has to do also with supply and demand as well. right now, what you are seeing is it is not so clear-cut why a japanese investor or european investor would buy u.s. treasuries, because the hedging costs have risen so increased inas yields. the currency has exposures of they would have for treasury yields, we are not that high-yielding, so it is not that attractive. if you don't have that bit and you have more supply, all of a sudden, the bonds can actually come out and can demand more yield. david: so why are they so high? lisa: because the dollar has fallen. there is the expectation that the dollar could weaken and there is a trend there. david: so it looks like congress will be a lit