Thank you, Andrew. Good morning, everyone. For the quarter, net interest income grew 10% to $47.9 million from the prior year, driven by increased interest rates on new loan originations and growth in our loan portfolio during the past 12 months. Our net interest margin on gross loans was 8.1% for the quarter, down 32 basis points from the first quarter last year and down 2 basis points from the fourth quarter of 2023. Compression in our NIM continues to be attributable to the higher interest rate environment with our average cost of funds increasing 100 basis points from last year, offset by a 56-basis-point increase in our yield as we continue to pass along a portion of these higher rates on new originations. During the quarter, we originated recreation loans at an average rate of 15.31%, and home improvement loans at an average rate of 12.05%, both in excess of the current weighted average coupons on those portfolios at 14.8% and 9.6%. As we've said in the past and which still holds true today, given the fixed rate nature of our loans, increasing the average couponing yield is a slow process, slower than the rise of cost of funds. That said, we do anticipate that our average couponing yield will continue to increase well after our cost of funds plateaus, at which point the compression we've seen in our margin should reverse and begin to expand. Although we do still expect additional compression over the next several quarters, we believe that we are closer to the bottom than not. And despite further compression anticipated, we do believe that our level of NIM positions us well above industry norms. During the quarter, we originated $173 million of loans with total loans outstanding increasing 12% to $2.2 billion from a year ago, and we saw our yield increase to 11.34% from 10.78% over the same period. We maintain tighter credit criteria, which is consistent with our view of ongoing uncertainty in the economy. Non-prime recreation loans were 36% of the portfolio. And nonprime originations during the quarter were 30%, down from the 34% and 35% levels originated during the full 2023 and 2022 years. Our home improvement portfolio continues to be overwhelmingly prime and super prime credits with only 1% of loans being nonprime. Our provision for credit loss was $17.2 million for the quarter compared to $4.0 million in the prior year quarter. The provision included a net benefit related to taxi medallion loan recoveries of $900,000 in the current quarter compared to a net benefit of $7.1 million in the prior year quarter. Higher charge-off activity in both consumer products, partly attributable to seasonality, the lower taxi medallion recoveries and benefits, along with increases in credit loss allowance related to growth in the recreation portfolio, were the key drivers related to our change in provision from a year ago. Operating expense was $18.2 million during the quarter, which was down sequentially from $19.1 million in the fourth quarter and down slightly from $18.4 million in the first quarter of 2023. Our quarterly supplement on our website shows how over the past several years and continuing into the current quarter how operating expense as a function of net interest income has migrated lower. Quarter-to-quarter, this may fluctuate. But you could see that over time, the growth in our net interest income has well outpaced any growth in operating costs as we continue to grow and scale our lending businesses. For the quarter, net income attributable to Medallion Financial shareholders was $10 million, $0.42 per diluted share. That covers our first quarter results. Andrew and I are now happy to take your questions.