We mentioned things like new award timing, facility and customer access, COVID exposures, and the FY23 budget is positive. Those are all trending more position than what we would have seen back in the July-August time frame. Cost of labor, contract expansions, sort of a little unchanged to negative, a little bit of pressure on margins if you look at continuing to retain current employees and hire new ones, and then the whole contract officer resources, those are about the same, so we’ve got some things that move us closer to the right goalpost and there’s some things that keep us somewhere along the left one, so we’re just trying to balance risk and opps. We could probably through in some of the 2024 comms commentary and does that blow back onto ’23, so we’re very comfortable with the guidance that we have out there.
We’re very strong and well positioned to land within that guidance, and we’ll be able to potentially make different moves and different commentary when we get to the end of our third quarter.
Bert Subin: Okay, that’s super helpful. Maybe just as a follow-up to that, if we look at that guidance, it implies a pretty healthy step up in the second half from 428 in earnings in 2Q to something north of 450 per quarter, I guess based on the cadence in the back half. Can you just walk us through what changes, and to your comments there on ’24, are you starting to contemplate anything like a potential government shutdown, or are you hearing anything like that? Just any commentary around what steps up in the back half and what those risks are.
Jeff MacLauchlan: Yes, I think maybe I’ll start that off and then let John address the second part of your question. The mix phenomenon that I alluded to a few minutes ago, a few questions ago, extends really nicely into your question here about the back half. We see a growing fixed price content, but we see some of that margin mix that I alluded to earlier changing in a way that’s favorable to margin. You can see a little bit of that if you look at our cash usage and a little bit of inventory growth. You can see sort of the front end of that starting to happen. In my prepared remarks, I referred to that when I talked about ramping revenue at the end of the second quarter and that attendant working capital growth, so we’re starting to see the front end of exactly what we expected to see in the second half. Again, at the risk of repeating myself, it’s really lining up nicely with right where we expected to be at this point in the year.
John Mengucci: Jeff, thanks. Bert, you brought up a little bit about government fiscal year 2024. Look, we’re hearing the same–I guess I’ll chose my words wisely, I’ll call it commentary. I’ve been asked noise, rhetoric, but look, there’s always a lot of noise and there’s always a lot of headlines. We’re a 60-year-old company, we’ve been through many environments and administrations, budget cycles. We’ve heard a lot of commentary and a lot of political-ness over time. Look, in all fairness, on one side you have legitimate concerns about the government’s deficit and debt situation, and therefore talk about budget cuts in government fiscal year ’24. On the other side, there remains significant bipartisan support to fund defense and national security, just given the geopolitical environment and threats.