Mark Kowlzan: One of the factors, if you think about recycled versus virgin fiber, virgin fiber prices and input costs, conversion costs have been very stable over the decades, relatively speaking, if you’re solely dependent on OCC, DLK, the price and cost input swings have been wild high, low, high, low. And so trying to anticipate what your conversion cost is not a good place to be if you’re 100% recycled. So we like where we are. We will continue with this model.
Anthony Pettinari: Okay, that’s very helpful. Thank you.
Mark Kowlzan: Next question.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Phil Ng from Jefferies. Please go ahead with your question.
John Dunigan: Good morning. Mark, Bob, Tom. This is John diving on for Phil. I wanted to start off with the implied 4Q guide box shipments. I mean, I know you said so far, bookings are up 14%, but bookings aren’t actually billed. So if I’m just reading your press release being up on a per day basis in 4Q quarter-over-quarter on the shipping day. It seems to imply that 4Q, at least for the guide is up about 14.5% or so, 15%. Is that the right way to think about it? Any kind of extra color you could give on that?
Tom Hassfurther: No, that’s not the right way to think about it, Phil. But I’m going to turn it over to Bob and see if he can walk you through this just a little bit, maybe if you calibrated.
Bob Mundy: Well, I’m not sure I can, Tom. No, Phil. That’s — I’m not sure maybe we’d talk afterwards, but it’s not sure how you’re arriving at that certainly from anything that we said we put out. But that obviously would be a tremendous thing if that were to happen, but I just don’t see how you’re getting there. Maybe if you could just talk off-line.
John Dunigan: Sounds good. And then just in terms of expectations going to the fourth quarter, obviously, it sounds like things are — even if not mid-teens, they’re still going pretty good and get more visibility. It seems a little bit in contrast to what [Indiscernible] said with just generally expectations for softer holiday demand. And I know it’s customer-by-customer, and they’re obviously not serving the whole market. But are you seeing the holiday demand here in the fourth quarter actually coming through pretty good?
Tom Hassfurther: Yes. I would say the holiday demand is going to be strong, yes.
John Dunigan: Great. And just one last quick clarification. The 174,000 tons of economic downtime that you called out, was that just for Wallula or the whole company is incorporated to that for the economic downtime?
Mark Kowlzan: That was the Wallula downtime.
John Dunigan: Okay. All right. Appreciate it. I’ll turn it over.
Mark Kowlzan: Okay. Thank you, next question. Jamie, anybody left on the queue? I guess we will conclude. I think we’ve lost our moderator on the call, but for those of you that joined us today, I want to thank you for taking the time, and I look forward to having you join us at the end of January for our full-year and fourth quarter call. With that, have a good day. Take care.