This is where we are on the it's just the flu scenario and we need to look at the whole, then consider the inter dependencies and the potential impact of one key uncertainty on the others. 1. We expect a spike in activity immediately after lockdown ends but we don't know by how much. Our customers have a pent up demand for all the non-essentials and there's a run on the shopping centre. The bottle store, hardware etc. will all being under pressure even the restaurants and coffee shops are full as people celebrate being out and about. Tenants are capable of recouping about 30%? of lost revenue. 2. We expect an economic impact on our customers but we don't know how severe or for how long. Although our customers have lost some income during the lockdown their costs were lower and because the world comes to terms with the fact that this virus is just like the flu it takes about 6 months for the demand side of the economy to come back to normal and with that earnings recovery back to where they were before lockdown. 3. We expect customer shopping behaviour to change but by how much and for how long? 4. Government could extend or lift the lockdown depending on where we are on the curve. A decision on a further lockdown extension would be informed by the rate of spread seen in average new daily cases between 10 and 16 April, which they were 95% sure would remain between 40 and 80 cases. Above 90 cases a day calculated over a week would result in a lockdown extension. This is according to Professor Salim Abdool Karim, the chairperson of Health Minister Zweli Mkhize's Covid-19 advisory group, who addressed a media briefing alongside other scientists on Monday night. You can read the entire article here https://www.news24.c...entist-20200414. This confirms a Rule of the Game and gives us an excellent parameter to monitor and for the sake of this scenario the average of new daily cases for the period 10-16 April 2020 is <90. 5. Will the development of regional shopping mall continue? Under this scenario it would suggest that shopping patterns will be back to normal within the next 12-18 months. Regional shopping centres are usually based on long term demographic studies which are incorporated into a feasibility study with a 20-30 year time horizon. The worst of the economic impact would be felt during the construction phase so it follows that there would be no reason to halt the development.