crude oil prices being as elevated as they are, that has a huge effect on chemicals, on metals, on soft agriculturest things like wheat, corn, fertilizers and other ingredients you need. what are the ripple effects we have to do with? fiona: the ripple effects could be enormous. the big thing to watch and we are talking about natural gas is at what point do we see some of these big industrial users shut down production and do that, because if they have a contract for natural gas it might be seller -- better to sell it back to the grid, which seems quite unbelievable but we see that happening. while that might be what breaks natural gas prices and causes the final spike higher, what did might also do is just transfer that inflation risk from energy into other industrial products. because if we are not producing those products, then prices for those will go up. and it reverberates into everything from poultry production to the making of aluminum cans. sonali: it is interesting because we talk about this in terms of inflation at the moment, but how do you think about this when it comes to weather and