True, so far the corporate officers and BOD members have instilled much faith in Amarin's future. That in itself is disturbing. So was the loss of Denner's first CEO. The fact the guy left so quickly was obviously not a good sign. Regarding the delisting issue I recall from one conference call that management stated the do have some levers they could pull to avoid a delisting. (Of course, one of those may be reverse stock split which most here are not eager to see.) Maybe the right question here is what should Amarin be doing to make itself attractive to BP? Is management doing anything special in that regard?