Thank you, Ted. As of June 30, 2022, our investment portfolio totaled $536 million, down $10 million from $546 million as of March 31, 2022. Our investment portfolio consisted of debt and equity investments in 98 portfolio companies at June 30, 2022, as compared to debt and equity investments in 97 portfolio companies at March 31, 2022. During the quarter, we made investments in 4 new portfolio companies, with fundings totaling $11.6 million. We also made a $500,000 capital contribution to SLF. In addition, we had revolver, add-on or delayed draw fundings, to existing portfolio companies totaling $9.2 million. During the quarter, we received 2 full payoffs totaling $9.6 million and had loan sales and other ordinary course loan repayments aggregating $9.9 million. Subsequent to the end of the second quarter and the filing of the 10-Q, we had repayments of approximately $27.9 million, net of investment activity. We are well positioned to redeploy this capital carefully into attractive assets that will benefit from increases in interest rates through participating in the substantial pipeline of opportunities generated at Monroe. At June 30, we had total borrowings of $320 million, including $190 million outstanding under our revolving credit facility and $130 million of our 2026 notes. Total borrowings increased slightly by $1.7 million during the quarter. The revolving credit facility had $65 million of availability as of June 30, subject to borrowing base capacity. Turning to our results. For the quarter ended June 30, 2022, adjusted net income -- net investment income, a non-GAAP measure, was $5.4 million or $0.25 per share compared to $5.4 million or $0.25 per share in the prior quarter. When considering our target deleverage in the current credit performance at MRCC, we believe that on a run rate basis, our adjusted NII will cover the $0.25 per share quarterly dividend, all other things being equal. As of June 30, our net asset value was $232.1 million, which decreased from $244.9 million in net asset value as of March 31. Our NAV per share decreased from $11.30 per share at March 31 to $10.71 per share as of June 30. The $0.59 per share NAV decrease was substantially the result of market volatility and spread widening, which increased net unrealized losses. We experienced the same effect approximately 2 years ago at the outset of COVID-19. Looking to our statement of operations. Total investment income was $13 million during the second quarter, up from $12.5 million in the first quarter, due to higher fee income, partially offset primarily by lower interest income. During the second quarter, we placed no additional borrowers on nonaccrual status. Total nonaccruals approximate 2% of the portfolio at fair value at June 30, down from 2.2% of the portfolio at fair value at March 31. At June 30, the effective yield on our debt and preferred equity portfolio was 8.5%, up from 8% at March 31. LIBOR rates, which had been at historically low levels, rose during the quarter with 1-month LIBOR at approximately 179 basis points as of June 30 versus approximately 45 basis points as of March 31. We maintain interest rate floors in nearly all our deals with the majority of floors at a level of at least 1%. As interest rates did not exceed the majority of our floors until the rate reset date at the end of June, the second quarter did not include a significant benefit in interest income from this rising rate environment, and we expect to see a more sizable impact during the third quarter. All other things being equal, a rising interest rate environment will improve the yield on our investment portfolio and increase net investment income as reference rate levels exceed interest rate floor levels. On most amendments and on virtually all of our newly originated deals, we are focused on pricing our deals as a spread to the secured overnight financing rate, or SOFR, in advance of LIBOR going away, which is expected to occur in 2023. Moving over to the expense side. Total expenses for the quarter increased from $7.1 million in the first quarter to $8 million in the second quarter, primarily driven by higher incentive fees net of associated fee waivers and income taxes, including excise taxes, partially offset by lower interest and debt financing expense as a result of the repayment of our SBA debentures during the first quarter. Net loss for the second quarter totaled $12.4 million compared to a net loss of $4.6 million in the first quarter. Net unrealized losses on investments were $13.4 million for the second quarter, primarily driven by the market volatility and spread widening, partially offset by unrealized gains approximating $1 million on foreign currency forward contracts. As of June 30, the SLF had investments in 62 different borrowers, aggregating $195.2 million at fair value with a weighted average interest rate of 7.1%. The SLF's underlying investments are loans to middle-market borrowers that are generally larger and more sensitive to market spread movements than the rest of MRCC's portfolio, which is focused on lower middle market companies. The SLF's portfolio decreased in value by 3.1% during the quarter from 97.9% of amortized cost as of March 31 to 94.8% of amortized costs as of June 30. During the second quarter, MRCC received income distributions from SLF of $900,000, consistent with the first quarter. As of June 30, 2022, the SLF had borrowings under its nonrecourse credit facility of $129.6 million and had $45.4 million of available capacity under its credit facility, subject to borrowing base availability. I will now turn the call back to Ted for some closing remarks before we open up the line for questions.