Craig Kliethermes: Well, I mean, I'll try and maybe Todd can join in here. But I mean, we obviously have always taken a long-term view of loss cost trends of, I'll say, a prudent view of risk that's factored into all of our estimates. Our starting booking ratios, we try to look at a reasonable range and try to be prudent and booked the initial loss ratio in maybe the higher end of that range, but certainly within the range. But to factor in the risks that are out there, particularly right now, you have legal system abuse. We invest heavily in our claim department and the communication between our claim department and our actuaries, which gives us real-time feedback of what the actuaries are seeing. Sometimes actuaries can get caught up in just data and we get the claim perspective on what might be driving that data. Obviously, our claim people are sharing that information with our underwriters as well, which helps give them information to either pull back or lean into a market. And we've had the same approach around here for much longer than I've ever been here. I mean at least 30 years it's been the same approach. We've not changed our approach. I'm not going to say we've always had favorable development. If you go back way far like in the last, really, really soft market in the early-2000s, late-1990s, we had adverse development as well, but just not as much as the rest of the industry and not as much as our peers. And I think, I would say that speaks to kind of our overall long-term approach to thinking about things and risk-based approach thinking about things.
Jen Klobnak: I'll add just a couple of other things if I can. I think part of it is our risk appetite with regard to small to middle market insureds that we target, generally speaking, in most of our businesses. We don't put out excessive limits to those insureds. So, you have maybe less of a target for some of this legal system of abuse that goes on. And then it comes down to hard work. So, when it comes to underwriting, you're going through the submission and you're underwriting. You're actually paying attention to where that insured is in terms of venues, what their work is, covering what their work is and not what they don't do - that might get kind of slotted in there. In claims, we're doing investigation early in that claim life. We are strategizing around knowing that the Plaintiff’s attorney has a playbook, and we know that we can counteract that playbook by getting the investigation early, staying ahead of public adjusters as an example, offering up a reasonable settlement at the proper time, and trying to be in that contact with our insureds to resolve those claims. So, it's really about kind of being diligent and going deep into our processes, whether it’s underwriting or claims. And also, our risk appetite, so that we're not as much of a target and when those cases do come up, where they look a little hairy, and we know how to address that and try to resolve the claim prior to getting kind of out of control.
Todd Bryant: The only thing I would add, I think Jen talked about it in her opener as well, and Craig spoke to it just a moment ago. Where we are -- we tend to be a little bit slow, we believe, in recognizing good news. We are extending the reporting patterns in some of the auto and excess liability areas, where we have seen a bit higher emergence, maybe not to the level of others. But we have seen a few things there, so we believe it is prudent to be a bit cautious there. So, you do see that a little bit lower from a favorable development on the
Casualty side compared to third quarter of last year. Again, third quarter of last year, this just moved around a bit. The process is consistent, but we had significant favorable on EPG third quarter of last year, I think about $9 million. So that accounts for a lot of the difference here. Quarter-to-quarter, we take a consistent approach. We are cautious or prudent on where we set the initial booking ratios, we believe we may be a bit slower to move off of that. So that, I think, helps -- has helped historically with some of the consistency you'd have seen.
Craig Kliethermes: And again, I would add one more thing. I think we're adamant of getting information in the hands of our underwriters and because of our business model, because our underwriters are focused on underwriting profit, they listen for one thing, maybe their ego is a bit in check in regard to those conversations and they're wanting to try to continue to grow underwriting profit. And I think Jen mentioned, I mean, obviously we manage our limits. We're not a big limit carrier. We don't put out really big limits. We avoid deep pocket insureds for the most part, manage our jurisdictions and our underwriters do a pretty good job of