Thank you, Shiraz. We believe that SLRC's commercial finance investment model provides us with the flexibility and capabilities to capitalize on the most attractive lending opportunities across our 4 private credit investment strategies. This diversity provides us with the flexibility to determine where we want to invest today and importantly, the ability to say no. We take a fundamental bottom-up approach to our portfolio construction based on the relative attractiveness or risk-adjusted returns across our investment verticals. At quarter end, on a fair value basis, the comprehensive portfolio consisted of $3.1 billion of senior secured loans to approximately 800 distinct borrowers. This was across 110 industries with $3.8 million as our average position. Measured at fair value, 99.3% of the portfolio consisted of senior secured loans with 97.8% invested in first lien loans, including investments in the SSLP attributable to the company and only 0.3% was invested in second lien cash flow loans with the remaining portfolio invested in second lien asset-based loans aggregating 1.2%. Our specialty finance investments account for approximately 75% of our comprehensive portfolio with the remaining 25% invested in senior secured cash flow loans to upper mid-market sponsor-backed companies. We believe that this defensive portfolio construction positions us well for potential economic weakness and provides a differentiated risk return profile for our shareholders compared to cash flow only portfolios. At quarter end, our weighted average asset level yield was 11.8%, up from 11.6% in the prior quarter. Our portfolio credit quality remains strong. At March 31, the weighted average investment risk rating of our portfolio was just under 2 based on our 1 to 4 risk rating scale with 1 representing the least amount of risk. Consistent with last quarter, over 97% of the portfolio is rated at 2 or higher and 99.2% of the portfolio on a cost basis and 99.4% on fair value were performing with only 2 investments on nonaccrual. Now let me turn to our 4 investment strategies. Sponsor Finance or cash flow lending. In our Sponsor Finance business, we originated first lien senior secured loans to upper mid-market companies in noncyclical industries, such as health care, business services and financial services, which has helped us mitigate the impact from cyclical economic factors. At quarter end, our Sponsor Finance cash flow portfolio was approximately $750 million, which includes loans in the SSLP attributable to the company. Which invested across 48 distinct borrowers. With approximately 99% of this cash flow portfolio invested in first lien loans, we believe our investments are well positioned to withstand liquidity pressures that borrowers may face in today's environment. Additionally, we believe we have a defensively positioned portfolio. Our cash flow borrowers have a weighted average EBITDA of approximately $125 million carry low LTVs of approximately 40% and interest coverage of approximately 1.7x, consistent with last quarter. Our portfolio is comprised of businesses that perform essential services with either recurring or reoccurring revenues and have low capital intensity. Overall, our portfolio has exhibited solid credit metrics that have remained steady throughout this year. During the quarter, we originated $33 million of cash flow loans and experienced a of $16 million. Our first quarter investments, all of which were first lien have an average yield to expected maturity of 12.2% and leverage through our investment of 3.8x. Importantly, this leverage level is less than historical average for new issues. As Michael mentioned, Sponsor Finance deal flow continues to be muted due to lower M&A volume. However, there are pockets in our defensive industries to invest on an attractive risk-adjusted basis. At quarter end, the weighted average cash flow yield was just under 12%. Now let me turn to our ABL segment. In the wake of the U.S. regional banking crisis last spring, the opportunity set for all of our ABL businesses has increased. As lending standards tightened at commercial banks, we saw an increase in ABL to flow. As a result, we were able to originate several attractive new investments. As new entrants with less experience have entered the space, we've remained committed to our high underwriting standards in which we focus on the quality of the underlying collateral when determining acceptable loan-to-value lending ratios. The increase in our deal volume is enabling us to remain attractive active while being extremely selective. At quarter end, our ABL portfolio totaled $930 million, representing 30% of our total portfolio and was invested in 166 different borrowers. The weighted average asset level yield was 15.7% compared to 14.5% in the prior quarter. For the first quarter, we had $53 million of new investments and repayments of $103 million across our ABL strategies. Now let me touch on Equipment Finance. At quarter end, this portfolio totaled $1 billion, representing 1/3 of our total portfolio and was highly diversified across 550 borrowers. The credit profile of this portfolio continues to be solid. The weighted average asset level yield was approximately 8%. During this quarter, we originated approximately $150 million of new investments and had repayments of approximately $143 million. Our investment pipeline has expanded in conjunction with the disruption caused by last year's regional bank failures. Finally, let me touch on Life Sciences. At quarter end, this portfolio totaled $338 million. Over 80% of our portfolio at par is invested in loans to borrowers that have over 12 months of cash runway. Additionally, all of our life science companies are generating revenue with at least 1 product in the commercialization stage. This significantly derisks our underlying investment. Life Science loans represented 11% of the portfolio and contributed over 22% of our gross investment income for the quarter. During the first quarter, the team funded $24 million of new investments and had repayments of $52 million. At quarter end, the weighted average yield was approximately 13% on our life science loans and this excludes the addition of potential success fees and warrants. While we expect valuations in the life sciences market to stabilize this year, we continue to see several new opportunities that we believe will meet our underwriting criteria. Given SLRC's ability to allocate capital to the best risk-reward opportunities, we have the luxury of being highly selective in our capital deployment towards life sciences while still generating positive originations for the company overall. Lastly, I want to touch on the company's investment in SSLP. SSLP was a strategic initiative, which we put in place at the end of 2022 following the merger with SLR Senior Investment Corp. This was done to rotate some lower-yielding cash flow loans from Sun's portfolio. Six quarters after launching the initiative, we are pleased with the ramp of the portfolio and the income that has delivered thus far. In the first quarter, SLRC earned $1.6 million from the SSLP program, representing a 13.6% annualized yield. This compares to earnings of $1.1 million last quarter or an annualized yield of 10.3%. As of quarter end, investment commitments at the SSLP totaled $238 million. And post quarter end, we have invested an additional $6 million in the SSLP, bringing our total commitments to $244 million. Now let me turn the call back to Mike.