einar, what's driving that move by china?hina is trying to send a message, and they're trying to remind the us that the us designs the chips. the chips are fabricated in the east, whether it's taiwan, japan or south korea. but china is part of this global supply chain, and it does have these strategic minerals. it has a lot of them. but, you know, you'll note that it has not been a complete restriction. what they've done is kind of mirrored what the us has done, which is to say that anybody who's exporting has to indicate who it's being exported to and apply through a process very similar to what's happening in the us. and einar there is concern, isn't there, that china is growing dominant in the provision of these, well, certain key raw materials. but as we all know, you know, it's a globalised world we live on, and if china clings to them too tightly, everyone loses out, no? yeah, that's right. but it goes both ways, when one nation, the united states, which designs these chips, says that they're not going to allow any of t