Thanks, Jason. Deal activity continued to pick up in the third quarter, driven by a combination of lower borrowing costs due to spread compression, rate cuts and a strong economy. Most of the activity continued to be driven by refinancings and recapitalizations, which represented almost 50% of overall volume. While we expect fourth quarter deal activity to be relatively steady with Q3, we are anticipating that LBO volumes and overall deal flow will pick up in 2025 as recent and future rate cuts lower borrowing costs, which should continue to increase the momentum in LBO activity that we have seen in recent quarters. In addition, the market reaction to the results from the presidential election suggests optimism around increased deal activity, aided in part by the prospect of less regulation. As we have discussed before, we continue to believe direct lending remains the market of choice for our sponsors in the lower and core middle-market, given the benefits of our expertise, including speed, certainty of execution, and flexibility and the ability to serve as a true partner in developing bespoke capital structures. Please turn to Slide 15, where we highlight our recent activity. Gross deployment in the third quarter totaled $73 million, as you can see on the left-hand side of the page, 97% of which was in first-lien investments. During the quarter, we closed six new platform investments, totaling $33 million. These new investments were loans to private equity-backed companies with a weighted average spread of approximately 500 basis points. We continue to back well-capitalized borrowers with significant equity cushions and the weighted average loan-to-value of our new investments for the quarter was 32%. The remaining $40 million came from incremental investments in our existing portfolio companies. These have been a strong source of capital deployed on a year-to-day basis compared to prior periods, as we have continued to see higher levels of opportunistic refinancing and accretive M&A add-on opportunities within our existing borrower universe. The $73 million in gross deployment compares to approximately $92 million in aggregate exits, sales and repayments, resulting in net realizations of approximately $20 million for the quarter. On the realization front, it is also worth noting that in the fourth quarter, we have opportunistically realized an additional eight acquired First Eagle names for total proceeds of approximately $42 million at a modest premium to our cost basis. Inclusive of these names, we have now rotated 46% of our cost basis in the acquired First Eagle BDC. Turning back to the broader portfolio, please flip to Slide 16. You can see that the weighted average yield of our income-producing securities at cost came down modestly quarter-over-quarter to 11.6%, primarily due to a reduction in base rates and partially driven by a reduction in the weighted average spread with the realization of certain higher-yielding assets. As a reminder, this metric, represented by the dark blue line at the top of the chart, includes the impact of income-producing equity investments. As of September 30th, 97% of our debt investments at fair value were floating rate with a weighted average floor of 80 basis points, which compares to our 66% floating rate liability structure based on debt drawn with no floors. Overall, our investment portfolio continues to perform well with year-over-year weighted average revenue and EBITDA growth. With that being said, even with the recent interest rate cuts, we have continued to monitor the impact of borrowing costs on our portfolio companies. The weighted average interest coverage of the companies in our investment portfolio at quarter end improved 1.8 times, as compared to 1.7 times for the prior two quarters. As a reminder, this calculation is based on the latest annualized base rates each quarter. All else being equal, we expect that interest coverage will continue to improve with further rate cuts. We also continue to closely monitor how our portfolio companies are managing fixed operating costs. Our analysis demonstrates that our portfolio companies in the aggregate are well-positioned to address fixed charges with operating cash flows and available balance sheet liquidity. As expected, we saw another quarter-over-quarter decrease in aggregate revolver utilization with approximately 66% of aggregate revolver capacity available across the portfolio at the quarter end, up from 57% in the prior quarter. It is worth noting that we have continued to see an increase in repricing given tightening spreads. We approach repricing as a re-underwriting exercise where we evaluate if the portfolio company has demonstrated meaningful improvement in credit worthiness since underwrite through growth and deleveraging and that the proposed repricing presents an attractive relative value to new origination opportunities that we are seeing today. Our portfolio continues to benefit from the substantial amount of equity invested in our companies, most of it supplied by large and well-established private equity firms with whom we have longstanding relationships and have partnered with in multiple transactions. And we know that the weighted average loan-to-value in the portfolio at time of underwrite is approximately 40%. With that, I will now turn it over to Gerhard.