Tom Long: Yeah. Our goal is to get to that BBB flat. If it goes below four, we’re okay with that. We won’t be upset with that, but I will tell you that’s still the target. But here’s where I’d like to expand on that a bit. Not all these leverage metrics when they come out of the same. As you know, leverage is only one metric. You have to also look at the makeup of the earnings stream, you have to look at the scale of the company and the size. And when you start looking through all those various components like what a rating agency uses, we clearly are strong in all those areas. So our leverage metric, when we put it out, we think it’s what fits for us. We think that BBB is a good place to be and that’s what we’re going to continue to target.
Keith Stanley: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. And the next question comes from Jeremy Tonet with J.P. Morgan.
Jeremy Tonet: Hi. Good afternoon.
Tom Long: Good afternoon. Jeremy.
Jeremy Tonet: I just want to pick up with Permian egress on the natural gas side if I could. And I want to see the latest thoughts on Warrior and outlook for that project and how you see I guess Waha spreads ebbing and flowing, we’ve seen volatility there and it seems like takeaway tightness could be back again. So just wondering what thoughts you could provide us on the basin as a whole and the outlook for Warrior at this point?
Mackie McCrea: Jeremy this is Mackie again. Yes, Warrior, we made announcements on the last earnings call that we signed about 25% to 30% of our target, we’re still at that level. However, we are in negotiations with over 2 Bcf of additional interest. This is primarily interest on market pull along the Gulf Coast and in the southeast and other parts of South Texas. As I think most know on this call, there’s other projects that are being built and other projects being looked at, but nothing compares to our project. We don’t have to lay as much pipe to provide the services that others are trying to provide. Our 42 inches pipe would be built if that’s where it ends up getting to an FID would be able to (ph) and it would enter into our significant Intrastate system that would feed a Katie and ultimately into our Louisiana interstates to get to the Gulf Coast.
So we have — because the other project is being built, people aren’t quite as panicked. Also we’re not seeing the blowout we thought we would see by now across Texas. It’s been kind of as you said ebb and flow between $0.40 and $0.80. We do think that’s going to blow out and we were firm believers that in the next 2.5 to 3 years there’s been a significant need for more capacity and we do believe that will be our pipeline. So our team is diligently working on that. It’s going to be one of those projects we have sufficient commitments from great customers that give us a guaranteed rates of return and at that time we’ll announce it, but we’re still very excited and working hard to get to the finish line.
Jeremy Tonet: Got it. That is helpful there. And I was just wondering if you could touch a little bit more on Lotus and what those assets mean in your hands as opposed to a standalone and what ET’s balance sheet could bring to bear as far as marketing or other opportunities with those assets?