Baires, I think you may be being a bit more meticulous than you need to be in your analysis involving Kimber. That might end up hurting you. There will come a point when a deal like this will go regardless of Preliminary Assessments, but just because gold is so expensive and reserves need to be grown quickly. Kimber is doing everything it can to grow its reserves, a process that is going to get more and more difficult as time goes on, because the resources necessary to do such a process, i.e. oil, labor, copper, steel, rubber, even wood will continue to get more expensive. The point is that Kimber is already sitting on a gold mine in a relatively stable place. What other juniors are sitting on a minable deposit that has potential to ultimately be shown to be 4-5 million gold equivalent ounces? Not very many. This is a very, very unique story, and a unique opportunity. Very few people see this yet. That is the reason and the only reason it is priced so cheaply. It is simple supply and demand. And the demand is just not there yet because people don't know what you and I already know. There is nothing else we need to know at this point. Even if Kimber never puts another drill in the ground, with the resources it has already, its worth ten times what its priced at now in a buyout. Bull