Thanks, Jim, and good afternoon, everyone. For the first quarter, we generated net income of $3.2 million or $0.23 per diluted common share. Key items that drove our results were softer net interest income, including a sequential NIM decline driven mainly by a change in the mix of originations during the quarter and adjustment of our variable rate SBA loans for the two Q4 rate reductions partly offset by solid fee income. Average loan balances including both held-for-sale and held-for-investment loans totaled $565 million for the quarter compared to $522 million in the prior quarter. This increase included growth from our SBA 7(a) commercial leases and consumer programs. Average interest bearing deposits were $430 million, compared to $355 million in the prior quarter. The sequential quarter increase was driven primarily by an increase in interest bearing demand deposits and broker time certificates of deposits to meet our funding needs. Net interest income was $14.3 million versus the prior quarter's $15.5 million, primarily due to the previously referenced change in the mix of loan originations, re-pricing the prime based variable rate loans and lower rates on additions to the held-for-investment loan portfolio partially offset by an increase in interest earning assets. Our net interest margin declined to 8.27% from 10% in the prior quarter driven primarily by a seasonal decline in origination volume from our three highest yielding held-for-sale programs, in addition of $40 million of lower risk and lower yielding loans to our held-for-investment portfolio and a decrease in yield in our SBA and other variable rate loans as the 50 basis point Q4 market interest rate reductions took effect. This overall decline in our net interest margin, while significant is directionally consistent with our expectations and commentary on prior earnings calls that we would see the NIM decline as we continue to migrate our loan portfolio to a lower risk profile. We continue to expect the net interest margin to decline over time due to our risk reduction strategy, though the downward progression could be slower in future periods if we have stronger origination from higher yielding held-for-sale loans or quicker if we fund large amounts of lower risk but lower yielding assets such as the Crescent enhanced loan portfolio. Fee income was $7.8 million in the quarter compared to $5.6 million in the prior quarter. The sequential quarter increase was primarily driven by a modest pickup in strategic program fees, a favorable change in the fair value investment in BFG, and an increase in miscellaneous income. The increase in other miscellaneous income was due to increased revenue growth from our operating lease portfolio, increased distributions received from BFG, and the $900,000 reduction of prior quarter miscellaneous income due to the write-off of the called CEs unamortized premiums that we described in January. Non-interest expense in the first quarter was $14.3 million, compared to $13.6 million in the prior quarter. The increase was primarily due to an increase in salaries and employee benefits and an increase in professional services expense resulting from reduction in accruals for legal services during the three months end in December 31, 2024. Our efficiency ratio was relatively flat quarter-over-quarter at 64.8% versus 64.2% in the prior quarter. We remain committed to generating positive operating leverage as we move through 2025 and begin to realize revenue associated with the new programs that have been developed. Future increases in incremental headcount will primarily be related to increased production and we do expect to see future decreases in the efficiency ratio. Our effective tax rate was 28.1% for the first quarter compared to 24.3% in the prior quarter. The change from the prior quarter was due primarily to permanent differences related to executive compensation. We expect an effective tax rate of roughly 27.5% for 2025. Lastly, we remain comfortable with the outlook provided on last quarter's conference call for the credit enhanced balances to increase by $50 million to $100 million by year-end 2025. Positively, we have been working proactively with many of our programs over the last six months and conversations continue to go well. We went live with two credit enhancement balance sheet programs by the end of 2024 and additional discussions continue. During the first quarter, we were also pleased to see material growth in an extended held-for-sale program. In this case, our strategic partner needed balance sheet access but for a period of less than the full term of the underlying loans, which varies from our credit enhancement program where FinWise typically holds the loans to maturity or payoff. That said, this enhanced held-for-sale structure also generates incremental bank earnings for FinWise through a yield split model with low credit risk and the bank is happy to initiate the program. This is another example of how FinWise delivers innovative lending products that support our strategic partners' growth and further enhances our revenue opportunities. With that, we would like to open the call for Q&A. For your information, Kent had to step away as he has a travel conflict. But Jim and I are here to answer your questions. Operator?