Thank you, Jacob, and good afternoon, everybody. Thank you all for joining us today. As you're aware, we issued our earnings this morning prior to market open, and I hope you've had a chance to review our results for the period ending September 30, 2023, which can also be found on our website. On today's call, I'll begin by addressing our third quarter results and current market conditions. Joyson Thomas, our Chief Financial Officer, will then discuss our performance in greater detail, after which we will open the floor for questions. This afternoon, I'm pleased to report strong performance for the third quarter of 2023 and Q3 GAAP net investment income and core net income was $10.8 million or $0.465 per share, which more than covered our quarterly base dividend of $0.37 per share. This represents an increase from Q2 GAAP and core NII of $10.6 million or $0.456 per share and an increase of over 10% year-over-year. As you may have seen in our press release this morning, the Board of Directors of the BDC approved an increase to our quarterly base dividend from $0.37 per share to $0.385 per share starting in Q4 of this year. The Board of Directors also improved a decrease in the base management fee rate paid to HIG WhiteHorse Advisors LLC, the BDC sponsor, from 2% to 1.75% effective January 1, 2024. This will have a further positive effect on our financial results and our ability to cover the increased base dividend on a go-forward basis. NAV per share at the end of Q3 was $13.87, representing a 0.9% decrease from the prior quarter NAV per share was negatively impacted by $5.4 million of net mark-to-market losses in our portfolio. These markdowns are related to company-specific performance and some of our consumer-facing portfolio companies as well as some specific challenges on certain portfolio companies that are experiencing independent economic conditions. Turning to our portfolio activity. We continue to see steady transaction activity across our markets relative to Q2, with market prices trending slightly down, which we believe is driving increased deal flows across the market. In Q3, gross capital deployments totaled $20.6 million with $8.4 million funding on 2 new originations and the remaining $12.2 million funding add-ons to existing portfolio investments. All of our new originations in Q3 were sponsored deals with an average leverage of approximately 4.3x debt-to-EBITDA. I note that these deals were all first lien loans with spreads of $650 million or higher at an average all-in rate of 11.9%. At the end of Q3, more than 97% of our debt portfolio is first lien and senior unsecured. Our portfolio has a sponsor mix composition of approximately 2/3 sponsor and 1/3 non-sponsor. In Q3, total repayments and sales were $31.7 million primarily driven by 2 complete realizations, 1 partial repayment and 1 partial sale. In addition, there were $1.7 million in net repayments made on revolver commitments. As discussed in our last earnings call, we expect repayments to pick up towards the end of the year. We have visibility into a number of likely repayments in Q4, and we'll seek to redeploy capital into attractive investments. At current market pricing, we expect new assets to likely be at similar pricing to the assets that are running off. During the quarter, the BDC transferred 2 new deals and 1 add-on to the Ohio STRS JV, totaling $8.8 million in exchange for cash of $5.1 million and $3.7 million of in-kind contribution to the JV. I'll discuss activity within the JV in more detail shortly. With repayments and sales outpacing originations during the quarter, the company's net effective leverage was reduced to 1.16x, down from 1.25x at the end of Q2. This is below the lower end of our target leverage range. And so long as our portfolio remains heavily concentrated in first lien loans, which have lower risk than second lien loans we expect to continue to run the BDC at up to 1.35x leverage. With that in mind, I'll now step back to bring our entire investment portfolio into focus. After the effects of net repayments and STRS JV transfers as well as $5.4 million in net mark-to-market changes, $0.3 million in realized losses and $1.2 million of accretion. The fair value of our investment portfolio was $706.8 million at the end of Q3. This compares to our portfolio fair value of $728.4 million at the end of the previous quarter. The weighted average effective yield on our income-producing debt investments increased to 13.4% at the end of Q2. The variance was primarily driven by an increase in the portfolio's base rate. We continue to utilize the STRS JV successfully. The JV generated investment income to the BDC of approximately $3.9 million in Q3, up from $3.7 million in Q2. As of September 30, the fair value of the JV's portfolio was $313 million and at the end of Q3, the JV's portfolio had an average unlevered yield of 12.2%, unchanged from the end of Q2 and up from 8.8% at the end of Q3 of 2022. The year-over-year increase in unlevered yield is primarily due to rising base rates as well. The JV is currently producing an average annual return on equity in the mid-teens in the BDC, so we believe that WhiteHorse's equity investment in the JV provides very attractive returns for shareholders. Transitioning to the BDC's portfolio more broadly, there were some markdowns in the portfolio in Q3, as I mentioned earlier. As we've shared before, we are seeing some pressure on our portfolio and the general economy as well. primarily in the consumer segment. We remain vigilant in monitoring our portfolio of companies, and we have not seen demand weakness in other sectors, including general industrial, B2B, health care, TMT or financial services. Additionally, our portfolio includes mostly noncyclical or light cyclical borrowers, and we hold no direct exposure to oil and gas, auto or restaurants and very little exposure in the construction sector. The vast majority of our deals have strong covenant protection, and we are finding that, in most cases, private equity firms we partnered with are supporting their credits with new cash or contingent equity as needed. The BDC's Q3 mark-to-market declines were driven by our investments in Arc Store Midco, American Crafts, Motivation on marketing and Playmonster. These declines were partially offset by net mark-to-market increases in various other portfolio investments. As mentioned on our last call, our investment in Crown brands, a second lien loan, was moved to nonaccrual in Q2. Although Crown Brands continues to make interest payments, we expect that the investment will remain on nonaccrual until the company achieves its projected performance levels. American Crafts first lien delayed draw term loans were placed on nonaccrual status in July, resulting in an impact of approximately $0.13 per share of net NII for the quarter. Our investments in Play Monster and Arcserve remain on nonaccrual as well, and we are in the midst of an active restructuring to try and resolve ArcServe. We do remain optimistic on our ability to effectively navigate and turn around trouble investments. Whitehorse and H.I.G. Capital have a proven ability to leverage our collective resources and expertise turnaround investments with the objective of minimizing losses and preserving capital. We're actively working with our portfolio companies to improve their performance. As an example, the performance of Starco Holdings which began to improve during the third quarter as a result of HIG's efforts in operating the company. Similarly, last quarter, I mentioned our successful exit from our previously troubled investment in our coal, which produced approximately 1.25x return on the original invested capital. At the end of the third quarter, investments on nonaccrual totaled 2.8% of our total portfolio at fair value across the portfolio, we see balanced activity in terms of credit performance. Roughly 50% of our portfolio companies have been performing better than they were closing. Approximately 35% are performing below where they were at closing and the balance is performing more or less in line with closing levels. Turning to the broader lending market. We saw the direct lending markets begin to shift back in the direction of normal market activity during Q2, and this trend continued through Q3 with the markets continuing to treat lower mid-market companies more conservatively than mid-market companies. In the lower mid-market, we're seeing deals being levered at 3.5x to 5x with loan-to-value running up to 50%. We are seeing leverage in mid-market deals of 4 to 5.5x a little bit higher with loan to value a little bit higher as well, typically up to 55%, although many of the deals are at 50% and below LTV. Responsor deals, pricing and lower mid-market deals is typically within a range of SOFR 600 to SOFR 650. And in the middle market SOFR 575 to SOFR 625. The nonsponsor market hasn't moved much. It is still typically 2.5 to 4x on leverage and under 50% loan to value. Nonpriorpricing still tends to be SOFR 650 and above pretty consistently. We think the Fed is succeeding and stalling the economy, and we expect a mild to moderate recession in 2024. We remain conservative with our expectations and factor in a downturn equivalent to 2008 and 2009 in all of our investment decisions. WhiteHorse is consistently and deliberately chosen to deploy capital into deals with more conservative terms. And as such, has built a portfolio that we believe is well equipped to stand a potential economic downturn. For this reason, the deals that we're working on are mostly noncyclical or light cyclicals, and we continue to be highly selective about which credits we will enter at the BDC. For deals that have even moderate leverage -- sorry, for deals that have even a moderate degree of cyclicality, we are trying to keep leverage at under 4x. In general, we're seeing a continuing rebound in terms of both deal volume and quality, and our pipeline activity levels remain high. Our 3-tier sourcing architecture continues to provide the BDC with differentiated capabilities. We continue to derive significant advantages from the shared resources and affiliation with HIG, who is a leader in the mid-market and lower mid-market. WhiteHorse has nearly 70 investment professionals located in 11 regional markets across North America, the strength of the origination pipeline enables us to be very conservative in our deal selection. Following repayment activity in Q3, the BDC balance sheet is approximately $15 million of capacity for new level range. The JV has approximately $30 million of capacity supplementing the BDC's existing capacity. With the move in market deals that are priced below SOFR 650 are targeted for the JV. Those prices of 650 and above are largely targeted from the BDC balance sheet. We're actively working on 10 new mandates and conducting due diligence on them. In addition, we have mandates for 5 add-ons to existing credits. While there can be no assurance that any of these deals will close, a number of these mandates would fit within the BDC or our JV should we elect to transact. Subsequent to quarter end, we have closed 3 new originations and 1 add-on to an existing portfolio company with several more pending and 3 of these investments being transferred to the JV during the fourth quarter. We remain cautiously optimistic for the final quarter of 2023 and into the new year. Despite sustained concerns of economic softening, we believe continued execution of our 3-tiered sourcing approach and rigorous underwriting standards leaves WhiteHorse well positioned to navigate any future potential economic challenges and we hope to continue delivering for our shareholders. With that, I'll turn the call over to Joyson for additional performance details and a review of our portfolio composition. Joyson?