Paul Raymond: Thanks Jérôme for the question. It’s not as much the orders in the backlog that are easy to defer, because most of those are already booked, are projects undergoing and things that are already on the go. The new bookings, we had one client that we signed recently, they committed to a multi-million dollar ERP project, it’s signed but they want to start in September, so it’s that type of–so it’s the newer contracts that we’re signing, we’re seeing some of them saying, I’m ready to book right now and sign, but I want to start in a couple of months. I think it’s going to be more newer bookings of large projects that you’re going to see those types of things, Jérôme, and that’s anecdotal, it’s one project, but still.
Jérôme Dubreuil: Yes, interesting. Thanks. Then a bit of a clean-up item here, were there particular costs related to the rebranding in the quarter, and is it material at all?
Paul Raymond: It was not material. It was all done internally by our own people.
Jérôme Dubreuil: Okay, thank you. Then just to clarify your point on the pressure in banking, you point pressure is mostly in the U.S. but then you’re mostly exposed to Canada. I just want to clarify how exposed you think you are to this trend.
Paul Raymond: That’s what I’m saying – I’m kind of cautiously optimistic, because right now we have little exposure in the U.S., but as you all saw the quarterly reporting from the Canadian banks, they’re all taking massive write-downs and they’re all being very cautious, so I’m being very cautious as well. I’m following this, so I think there is some collateral damage in Canada from what we’re seeing in the U.S. Interest rates are still rising in Canada, so at some point I think there’s going to be some impacts on the real estate industry in Canada, which–and that’s going to have an impact on the banks. We’re keeping a really close eye on it. I think everybody is being very cautious right now on the Canadian banking side.
Jérôme Dubreuil: Great, thanks for the clarification, and thanks for answering the questions.
Paul Raymond: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. Next question comes from Vincent Colicchio at Barrington Research. Please go ahead.
Vincent Colicchio: Yes, good morning Paul. A few for me. What higher margin areas in Canada–hello?
Paul Raymond: Yes, we hear you, Vince.
Vincent Colicchio: What higher margin areas in Canada had the strongest growth in the quarter? Can you give us some color there?
Paul Raymond: Good question. We had growth kind of across the board last quarter in Canada. I’d say that the highest growth was probably in our government business, which from a gross margin perspective isn’t the highest, but from a net margin perspective is actually very good, so that was a strong area of growth. Another strong area of growth was our multi-year–our very large multi-year contract that we signed a year and a half ago, that’s still growing. Both those clients are going through some significant integration. QMI recently announced the acquisition of Freedom Mobile, so there’s going to be some significant integration projects coming from that, and it’s starting. Beneva is still going through the integration of the insurance company, the merger there, so that’s also generating some interesting projects. It’s really a combination of many things, and it’s tough to single out one thing.
Vincent Colicchio: Regarding Datum and Vitalyst, are your cross-selling synergies meeting your expectations?