Senator CORMANN (Western Australia—Minister for Finance) (14:05): I thank Senator O'Neill for that final supplementary question. This is the great thing. What we have agreed, with the Palmer United Party and the Australian Motoring Enthusiast Party, represented by their leader, Mr Palmer, is ensure that we have made specific provision in the statement of advice—a form that already exists—in relation to rights and obligations that are already provided for in the Corporations Act and the advice that I have received from the Office of Best Practice Regulation— The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock! Senator Moore: Mr President, I have a point of order specifically on direct relevance. As I stood, I was hoping the minister was getting close, but I would ask you to draw the attention of the minister to the specific question about the cost to business. Opposition senators interjecting— The PRESIDENT: Order! The minister is being directly relevant. Minister, you have the call. Senator CORMANN: When Labor imposed all of their additional and unnecessary red tape with their forecast changes, the cost to us—$750 million to implement, $375 million a year in additional— The PRESIDENT: Pause the clock! Senator Moore. Senator Moore: Mr President, a point of order on relevance: our question was specifically about cost to business of the changes brought in yesterday. We have not got there. The PRESIDENT: It also referred to a letter, and— Opposition senators interjecting— The PRESIDENT: Order! And it also referred to comments in the chamber yesterday. Senator Wong: Mr President, on the point of order: with respect, the changes were the letter read into Hansard yesterday. So it is the same topic. And we are asking: 'What is the business cost of the deal, which was read out into Hansard yesterday, by the minister?' The PRESIDENT: The minister has nine seconds left to answer the question. Senator CORMANN: The beautiful thing is that the measures that were supported by the Senate yesterday deliver $190 million a year in savings to the financial advisors, which will be passed through— (Time expired)