Thanks, Tripp. Good morning, everyone. These are fascinating times to operate a business and invest. Cannabis is uniquely enmeshed in this country's debates on health and wellness, criminal justice, individual choice and cultural identity. This week, a majority of voters in Florida supported legalization of adult-use cannabis, but they fell short of the 60% threshold needed for the measure to pass. Nebraska voters overwhelmingly approved a medical cannabis program. And in the Dakotas, voters rejected initiatives that would have legalized adult-use cannabis. On this news yesterday, the ETF MSOS, which tracks U.S. cannabis equities, fell by more than 25%. For Chicago Atlantic Real Estate Finance, it is business as usual, and we are as enthusiastic as ever. From inception, we aim to build an investment platform focused on serving the strongest operators in the most attractive markets with fundamental underwriting, differentiated returns and downside protection in an industry known for volatility. We execute through a platform that includes the industry's most expansive origination, real estate diligence, analytics and operational teams. We underwrite to leverage levels well below the traditional private credit and commercial mortgage markets and returns well above the traditional mortgage REIT market. We can do so because of our unique competitive position and our market focus. The election results change little for refi. Florida represents 7% of our portfolio. And as always, we underwrote our Florida investments assuming the continuance of the existing medical market. We do not invest based upon the expectation of speculative political or regulatory events, and that principle is fundamental to our focus on comfortable debt service coverage, collateral quality and deep understanding of our limited license markets. Still the passage of Amendment 3 in Florida would have opened up additional opportunities for investment. We do believe that federal rescheduling will likely occur in 2025 as President-elect Trump has endorsed the effort. And conceivably, an aligned Republican Senate and House could facilitate bipartisan progress on other initiatives such as SAFE Banking. The translation of campaign promises to congressional and executive action is an arena in which we can speculate, but is not a basis on which we invest. Chicago Atlantic Real Estate Finance will continue to focus on generating differentiated risk-adjusted returns by its focus on disciplined expertise and the unique competitive position. Today, we report positive Q3 earnings results and subsequent events that reflect the fruits of these efforts. The pipeline across the Chicago Atlantic platform has grown to $560 million, and we continue to prioritize operators in limited license states and those positions to transition from medical to adult use. We have liquidity in excess of $75 million to fund new investments. Last quarter, we noted that we were exploring other sources of accretive capital to accelerate our deployment this year and next. In October, we entered into a $50 million unsecured term loan from two institutional private lending platforms. The interest-only unsecured loan matures in October 2028, bears a fixed interest rate of 9% and may be repaid in whole or in part at any time. After two years, the loan may be repaid without penalty. We also received a rating of BBB+ from Egan-Jones on both the company and this unsecured term loan. Before I close, there are two data points on portfolio management that I'd like to highlight and at which I'd like to congratulate our team for execution. First, on interest rates, which David will touch on in more detail, we have successfully taken actions to limit our exposure to benchmark interest rate declines. Second, on 2024 maturities, we entered 2024 with $151 million in loans maturing this year, excluding Loan number 9, which remains on nonaccrual status. $89 million of these loans we successfully retained and extended through amendment. $15 million were extended with new terms and $47 million were repaid with full recovery of principal and accrued interest. By every available metric we track, the portfolio's credit quality has improved throughout this transition and our management of rate risk. David, why don't you take it from here?