still with us is itay tuchman from citigroup. itay, thank you so much for sticking around.look at some of the euro levels you gave me earlier, will you see some kind of verbal intervention from the ecb? is a higher euro problematic for the european central bank, or is it just, you know, the timeline of how it gets there? itay: you might see some mild rhetoric on the euro, and obviously, you know, the ecb does not want a higher euro, but i do not think we have reached that point where currencies have become better than your neighbor and into the major monetary policy position. i think fundamentally, the ecb is looking at the eurozone economy, quite worried about a second lockdown, yet there is not much more they can do outside of what has been telegraphed, you know, with a bigger package and the extension. the challenge is -- how do they actually act in a way that could impact the euro? there are very few, i think, likely tools at their expos disposal, and they will have to act. francine: there is, you know, the market is questioning whether they will be, you know, whether i