I think so. I think the debate at the Fed is all about the labor market. There are some subtleties there, especially because we don't have the September employment report and it might be a while before we get official data. Uh we like most market participants are trying to do the best we can with alternative data. They looked a little bit mixed in September. Looked like job growth was maybe a touch better, but measures of labor market tightness or labor market strength continued to decline. None of this though is probably a substitute for the official data. So for now, I think the path that the Fed laid out, there's really no reason to deviate from that path. And then we have somewhat muddy picture on on the labor market, but also this divergence between the labor market indicators and other trackers of GDP. It feels to me that's where a lot of the debate has to settle in the next few months, especially in the absence of government data. What are we going to use to figure out? I mean, you have people saying the economy is reacelerating or and and actually has more juice into next year and others are kind of thinking we're at stall speed.