Thanks, John. We believe the outlook for the rest of 2023 in the sponsor-backed direct lending market is positive, while deal flow continues to be down overall, the direct lending market remains the primary financing market available for sponsors. and there are pockets of activity, where we have the opportunity to make loans at attractive yields while remaining very selective. We remain bullish on the medium-term outlook for M&A, given the magnitude of dry powder for private equity and have started to see new deal activity pickup in recent weeks. We also continue to see good opportunities to make incremental loans to existing, well-performing portfolio companies seeking to pursue accretive M&A. deal structures remain compelling with leverage levels, meaningfully below peak levels and significant sponsor equity contributions representing the vast majority of the capital structures. Page 16 presents an interest rate analysis that provides insight into the positive effect of increasing base rates on NMFC's earnings. As a reminder, the NMFC loan portfolio is 89% floating rate and 11% fixed rate, while our liabilities are 56% fixed rate and 44% floating rate. Given this capital structure mix, we are long SOFR and thus have material positive exposure to increasing rates. In Q2, we saw average base rates close to current levels, with an average base rate on our assets of 5% versus current SOFR of about 5.4% and about 10 basis points lower than the average rate on our liabilities. If rates follow the projected SOFR curve and settle in the 3.5% area, we would still expect our net investment income to exceed our regular dividend as shown on the bottom chart, all else equal. Moving on to origination activity on page 17. In Q2, we originated about $30 million of new loans as we were fully invested during the quarter with limited repayment activity. Notably, during the quarter, we opportunistically sold about $120 million of assets at or above our marks in order to delever our balance sheet. For the past several quarters, we operated at the high end of our target leverage range of 1x to 1.25x and felt it was prudent to modestly delever. Given the high base rate environment, the impact of minor deleveraging has not impeded our ability to significantly outearn our regular dividend. As I discussed in the market overview, we continue to see compelling opportunities and have line of sight into a few repayments that should provide some available capital for deployment into our highest conviction deals. Turning to page 18. we show that our asset mix is consistent with prior quarters, where about two thirds of our investments, inclusive of first lien SLPs and net lease are senior in nature. Approximately, 8% of the portfolio is comprised of our equity positions, the largest of which are shown on the right side of the page. Assuming solid operating performance and a supportive valuation environment, we believe these equity positions could continue to increase in value and drive the book value appreciation. We hope to monetize certain of these equity positions in the medium term and rotate those dollars into cash yielding assets. Page 19 shows that the average yield of NMFC's portfolio has increased from 10.9% in Q1 to 11.6% for Q2, primarily due to the higher for longer shift in the base rate curve. Generally speaking, spreads remain attractive and support our net investment income target. Page 20 highlights the scale and credit trends of our underlying borrowers. As you can see, the weighted average EBITDA of our borrowers has increased over the last several quarters to $144 million. While we first and foremost concentrate on how an opportunity maps against our defensive growth criteria and internal New Mountain knowledge, we believe that larger borrowers tend to be marginally safer, all else equal. We also show the relevant leverage and interest coverage stats across the portfolio. Portfolio company leverage has been consistent over the last several quarters. loan to values continue to be quite compelling and the current portfolio has an average loan to value of just over 43%. From an interest coverage perspective, we've seen modest compression as base rates rise. The weighted average interest coverage on the portfolio declined slightly to 1.6x from 1.8x last quarter. We do expect interest coverage to move modestly lower SOFR contracts reset at today's rates, but note that we've seen sponsors continue to proactively support company liquidity and continued M&A activity as John outlined earlier. Finally, as illustrated on page 21, we have a diversified portfolio across 114 portfolio companies. The top 15 investments inclusive of our SLP funds account for 39% of total fair value and represent our highest conviction names. I will now cover our financial results. For more details, please refer to our quarterly report on Form 10-Q that was filed last evening with the SEC. As shown on slide 22, the portfolio had about $3.2 billion in investments at fair value at June 30 and total assets of $3.3 billion with total liabilities of $2 billion, of which total statutory debt outstanding was $1.6 billion, excluding $300 million of drawn SBA guaranteed debentures. net asset value of $1.3 billion or a $13.14 per share was flat compared to prior quarter. At quarter end, our statutory debt-to-equity ratio was 1.22x to 1x and 1.19x to 1x, net of available cash on the balance sheet. Consistent with the balance sheet deleveraging I mentioned previously. On Slide 23, we show our quarterly income statement results. For the current quarter, we earned total investment income of $95.2 million, $3.5 million increase from the prior quarter. The increase was primarily driven by higher interest income from base rate resets. Total net expenses were approximately $55.6 million, a $2 million increase quarter-over-quarter due primarily to higher base rates on our floating rate debt. As a reminder, the investment advisor has committed to a management fee of 1.25% for the 2023 calendar year. The investment advisor has also pledged to reduce its incentive fee if and as needed during this period to fully support the $0.32 per share regular quarterly dividend. The advisor intends to extend each of these commitments by one year. based on our forward view of the earnings power of the business, we do not expect the investment advisor to need this dividend protection program, and it is important to note that the investment advisor cannot recoup fees previously waived. Our adjusted NII for the quarter was $0.39 per weighted average share, which meaningfully exceeded our Q2 regular dividend of $0.32 per share. As Slide 24 demonstrates, 100% of our total investment income is recurring this quarter given the minimal fees earned [indiscernible]. you will see historically that over 90% of our quarterly income is recurring in nature, and on average, over 80% of our income is regularly paid in cash. We believe this consistency shows the stability and predictability of our investment income. Importantly, over 96% of our quarterly PIC income is generated from our green-rated names. Turning to slide 25. the red line shows the coverage of our regular dividend. This quarter adjusted NII exceeded our Q2 regular dividend by $0.07 per share. For Q3 2023, our Board of Directors has again declared a regular dividend of $0.32 per share, as well as a supplemental dividend of share, which will be paid on September 29th to shareholders of record on September 15th. As a reminder, our supplemental dividend program pays out at least 50% of any earnings in excess of our regular dividend. Since our Q2 earnings exceeded the regular dividend by $0.07, we are paying a supplemental dividend of $0.04 alongside the Q3 regular dividend. On Slide 26, we highlight our various financing sources. Taking into account, SBA guaranteed debentures, we had $2.3 billion of total borrowing capacity at quarter end with $357 million available on our revolving lines subject to borrowing base limitations. we have a valuable mix of fixed and floating rate debt, and the 56% of fixed rate debt continues to be an earnings tailwind in this rising base rate environment. As a reminder, covenants under both of our Wells Fargo and Deutsche Bank credit facilities are generally tied to the operating performance of the underlying businesses that we lend to, rather than the marks of our investments at any given time. Finally, on Slide 27, we show our leveraged maturity schedule. As we've diversified our debt issuance, we've been successful at laddering our maturities to manage liquidity and over 85% of our debt matures in or after 2025. For the 2018 convertible notes that mature later this month, we will utilize existing capacity on our revolving credit facilities to repay the notes. As a reminder, earlier this year, we proactively upsized our 2022 convertible notes to help address the 2023 maturities. Additionally, our multiple investment grade credit ratings provide us access to various unsecured debt markets that we continue to explore to further ladder our maturities in the most cost-efficient manner. With that, I would like to turn the call back over to John.