Barry C. McCarthy: Well, what I would tell you is, overall, we’re seeing very durable demand across our entire portfolio of services. We are seeing some shift between verticals or between different periods, where volume is up or down modestly by sector or time period. But in aggregate, we continue to see strong and continuous demand for solutions. And that’s — you can see that in our performance from a revenue perspective.
Marc Riddick: Great. And then I guess the last thing I was sort of thinking about is, I wanted to sort of circle back on the commentary that you had on the divestiture and sort of the opportunity for future pruning. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about maybe on a bigger picture, maybe what you’re seeing with the opportunities of within the M&A pipeline, sort of thoughts on current valuation, and whether that’s — if you’ve seen any changes there, any greater willingness of folks to engage or if that’s changed much over the last few months given the recessionary environment? Thank you.
Barry C. McCarthy: The broader M&A market, I think, has been fairly frozen for some period of time. We’re seeing maybe a little bit of a slight pat in that. And I think our perspective for our business is, we really like the core assets that we have in payments and data. And we feel like we’ve got plenty of runway there. And our first objective is of course, invest in the company for its success and continue to pay down debt. So are we going to be active in the M&A market to acquire assets, which is where I think you’re going, the hurdle rate for that kind of a transaction would be really, really high right now with interest rates. And I think that we believe that valuations are still a little bit frothy. So you never say never, but we like the businesses we have, and we like our pathway to continue to pay down debt, and we see that sort of as the first and primary path.
Marc Riddick: Excellent, thank you very much.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Chuck Nabhan from Stephens. Your line is open.
Unidentified Analyst: Hi, this is Alex Newman on for Chuck here. Sorry if I missed the call, but did you give expectations for revenue growth for the data segment in 2023, given some of that pull forward of revenue from Q1? And then just some of the drivers behind that revenue growth for the year, that would be great?
Chip Zint: Yes, Alex it’s Chip. Yes, we did. So for the full year, we’re expecting low single-digit revenue growth. And it’s important to note that we refer to that as on a comparable adjusted basis because that one will obviously have the change in the divestiture occurring over time. So we’ll continue to reconcile that and give you guys that. But for the full year, we see low single-digit growth. That’s a bit slower than what we saw across the data segment this past year, but that’s because this past year was such a large growth year. I mean that business grew north of 20%. It’s obviously we just know that it’s a high hurdle to clear. The first quarter specifically, we’re expecting to be a little difficult just because of those handful of campaigns that shifted into the fourth quarter out in the first quarter at kind of depleted the pipeline just a bit.
The team continues to work their pipeline list of deals, but we do know that the start of the year may be a little slower, but we don’t see any reason that, that business can’t grow low single digits for the full year.
Unidentified Analyst: Okay. And then just within the merchant services, could you speak to what you see in terms of what’s on the ground from your SMBs and what volumes are looking like and just the overall health?