Diego Cabrera Canay: Okay. I will take it. So about the investigation, we shared — we share — a lot of have been shared on the [six case] (ph) and we will do that if there is any material information. About the hiring, we are growing our payroll. We just decided that the growth is going to come more from Argentina than before. It is a place where we find a very good talent and we have completely prioritized Argentina over other countries. Right now, we have over 150 FTEs and again, as you know, hiring takes time until you find the right talent and onboarding, et cetera. But we are on track to increasing our workforce there. We don’t see it impacting the P&L. Again, you can find a very good talent. In the short term, it’s a bit cheaper than other parts of the world.
But in the mid to long term, we expect it to convert to international or to emerging market prices. And regarding dollarization, I don’t know if it’s going to happen, it’s very hard to speculate on that. If it were to happen, of course, it would make our life much easier in terms of processing cross-border payments, so we would welcome that.
Matt Coad: Thank you. Super helpful. And then I just had like one quick follow-up. The tax rate was a bit higher this quarter at 16%, 11% last quarter and you noted like the mix to local-to-local and more financial income driving that. Could you provide any guidance for like how we should think about modeling the tax rate going forward?
Diego Cabrera Canay: So again, it will be the result of the mix of profits we have in the different countries that we operate. There are very different tax rates within the different jurisdictions. And as you know, we currently have operations in 40 countries, another five countries we have holding at a operating company level. So it is really complex to provide a specific number. As long as we continue having a higher local-to-local profit as we did this quarter, and we also have financial income, particularly in countries like Brazil and Argentina, that would trigger higher income tax rate because those countries did carry — have a tax rate of 30-plus-percent. So as long as that situation continues, we expect to have similar tax rate as what you have seen in Q2. But again, we don’t guide for that because it will be basically the outcome of the changes in mix by country and the different type of transactions that we eventually have.
Matt Coad: Awesome. Thanks, guys.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Kaio Prato with UBS. Your line is open. Kaio Prato with UBS. Your line is open.
Kaio Prato: Hey, hello, everyone. Hi, Seba and team. Thank you very much for the opportunity, and welcome, Pedro. I have two quick questions on my side, please. The first is following the management change, just would like to have your view about the strategy going forward if there will be any change given the recent movements or if there is any other initiatives beyond payments and your current products that you could pursue in the medium term, and if so, if you can give us an example would be really helpful, please. And the second one, if I may, is just another quick follow-up in Argentina. I’m not sure if I completely understood, but I think in one of your answers, you mentioned that you do not expect any impact from the additional deval in the peso as you reprice your clients, otherwise, you will have a negative input, is that right?
Just would like to confirm. And if so, have you already repriced your client this week after the devaluation or not? That’s it. Thank you.