jonathan: michael shaoul still with us. let's talk about the economic data. g to move the needle for you? michael: i think if it is anywhere between 150,000 and 200,000 it is not really going to matter. there will be a little bit of excitement around her. you may get something big in the household survey. last month we had this very week number of people employed in the household survey, coupled with week participation rate. i think maybe we get the opposite this time, because that survey does bop around. we get more people added to the workforce and a better participation rate. i think the labor market is basically chugging along. it is tight. we are not adding a lot of new jobs. i do think, as you said, people are going to be looking at the different sectors. the jobs report suggests that openings are sort of broadening in some of the sectors. no piece of data is showing any significant layoffs in the core economic sectors of the economy. so, we remain in a full employment environment with plenty of wage gains running ahead of inflation. it is not a wage pri