Despite the key rate cuts, the new QE round of 700 billion UST buyback, the unfreezing of swap lines with the ECB, the Bank of England and the Central Banks of Japan and Canada, as well as the zeroing of the reserve requirements of the U.S. banking system, I can say the following: out of more or less similar drops, October 1987 and the fall of 2008, when the index fell from its peak values by 20.47% and 27.15% respectively. Now the index has fallen from its highs by 26.6%. Consequently, we have already survived the fall of 1987, but we have not yet reached the deepest point when the Lehman Brothers collapsed. I mean, there's still plenty to fall on. And it's very real that this could happen in the next month. If you look at history, there's still about 12-16% potential to fall. Of course, it is impossible to make analogies, but it is quite reasonable to think about it. The only thing I can add is that markets have never collapsed under the threat of a virus and a pandemic, i.e. a real threat to human life. And if so, I can expect anything. we may have a new paradigm ahead of us..