Thank you, Rob. Good morning, everybody. Thank you all for joining us today. As you are aware, we issued our earnings this morning prior to market open. I hope you have had a chance to review our results for the period ending September 30, 2024, which could also be found on our website. On today's call, I will begin by addressing our third quarter results and current market conditions. Joyceann Thomas, our Chief Financial Officer, will then discuss our performance in greater detail. Afterwards, we will open the floor for questions. Our results for the third quarter of 2024 were disappointing as our investment portfolio declined this quarter due to net realized and unrealized losses, which impacted our financial performance. Q3 GAAP net investment income and core NII was $9.2 million or 39.4 cents per share, which exceeded our quarterly base dividend of 38.5 cents per share but was slightly below Q2 GAAP and core NII of $9.3 million or 40 cents per share. NAV per share at the end of Q3 was $12.77, representing a 5.1% decrease from the prior quarter. NAV per share was impacted by net markdowns in our portfolio totaling $15.9 million, the majority of which related to markdowns on American Crafts and Honors Holdings, which I will discuss shortly. Turning to our portfolio activity in Q3, we had gross capital deployments of $51 million, which was partially offset by total repayments and sales of $30.2 million, resulting in net deployments of $20.8 million. Gross capital deployments of $51 million consisted of seven new originations totaling $49 million, with the remaining $2 million used to fund four add-ons to existing investments. Of our seven new originations in Q3, three were non-sponsor and four were sponsor deals, with the average leverage of approximately 4.13 times debt to EBITDA. All of our Q3 deals were first lien loans with an average spread of 575 basis points and an average all-in rate of 10.8%, compared to 11.8% in the second quarter of 2024. During the quarter, the BDC transferred three new deals and one add-on to the STRS JV. At the end of Q3, the STRS JV total portfolio had an aggregate fair value of $309.8 million and an average unlevered yield of 11.7%, compared to 12.3% in Q2. Leverage for the JV at the end of Q3 was 0.97 times compared with 1.08 times at the end of the prior quarter. We continue to utilize the STRS JV successfully and believe WhiteHorse's equity investment in the JV continues to provide attractive returns for our shareholders. At the end of Q3, 99% of our debt portfolio was first lien, senior secured, and our portfolio mix was approximately 63% sponsor and 37% non-sponsor. In Q3, total repayments and sales were $30.2 million, primarily driven by two complete realizations and one partial repayment and one partial sale. After the effects of deployments, repayments, and STRS JV transfers, as well as $15.9 million in net mark-to-market decreases, and the $1.3 million of accretion, the total value of our investment portfolio was $654.3 million. This compares to our portfolio's fair value of $660 million at the end of the previous quarter. The weighted average effective yield on our income-producing debt investments was 13.1% at the end of Q3, compared to approximately 13.8% in the second quarter of 2024 and 13.6% in the third quarter of 2023. Transitioning to the BDC's portfolio, the challenges in this quarter generally do not relate to the overall economy but rather are more company-specific. We are working with experts within HIG to optimize the outcomes of workout accounts. The balance of the portfolio is generally stable. During the quarter, we took a $6.6 million write-down on American Crafts and are currently seeking to either restructure or sell the company. The company's previously challenged performance was further impacted by the loss of a material customer in the quarter. We continue to execute improvement initiatives, and we believe we have the asset marked consistent with where it might be sold to a strategic player. We also took a $5 million write-down on Honors Holdings, reflecting continued challenging industry conditions with a slowdown across many fitness concepts, reflected in ongoing weak customer trends. We had previously placed the company on non-accrual status in the second quarter. We continue to work with the franchisor of the company to restructure the Honors Holding credit to try to ultimately improve the company's performance, and we, as the lender, have taken control of this credit. At the end of the third quarter, we also placed Telestream on non-accrual status, which resulted in a $0.9 million write-down. We recognized approximately $557,000 of income from the credit while reversing our approximately $300,000 in accrued interest. While the company continues to generate significant EBITDA, we are focused on restructuring Telestream, and our current expectation is that part of the loan will be back on accrual status within two quarters, and hopefully even sooner. Non-accrual investments totaled 5.0% of the total debt portfolio, compared with the prior quarter of 3.6% of the total debt portfolio. Turning to the lending market in general, conditions across all sponsor segments remain very aggressive. There continues to be a shortage of new quality deal flow, and what is in the market is at very thin pricing. We see middle market pricing compressed down to spreads of SOFR 475 to SOFR 525, and lower mid-market spreads move to approximately SOFR 475 to SOFR 575. From our perspective, we believe there is excessive leverage on a lot of credits that have cyclicality, and we are not participating in those transactions. There is a more attractive backdrop in the non-sponsor market, where the market continues to support leverage of only 3 to 4.5 times, and pricing tends to be between SOFR 600 to SOFR 800. We are redoubling our efforts to focus on the non-sponsor market, where there is better risk return in many cases and much less competition than what we are seeing in the on-the-run sponsor market. In the on-the-run sponsor market, we see generally very aggressive terms and therefore, focusing more on the off-the-run sponsor market and the non-sponsor market. Fourth quarter volume is likely to be modest compared to other fourth quarters. Generally, supply demand is out of balance with lenders stretching too far for the better credits. For example, what we see on many of the better credits is the leverage is often so high if the cash flows are not greater than a 1.0 fixed charge coverage level. More broadly, while we continue to think there will be some declines in interest rates, we are also concerned we could have government budgets that could put pressure on inflation based on the current policies of our newly elected president. So we do not necessarily believe SOFR will come down as far as the yield curve indicates, which is probably good news for the BDC, but it means we are being careful on debt service coverages. We have also continued to see some softening in the economy based on interest rates having been high over the last several years. Subsequent to quarter-end, the BDC closed one new investment and a few add-ons to existing credits totaling approximately $7.5 million and has had repayments of approximately $21 million, including three full realizations for approximately $35 million. The JV in the third quarter had repayments for three investments. Following net repayment activity in Q3, and pro forma for several transactions in early Q4, and the special distribution we announced in October, the BDC balance sheet has approximately $45 million of capacity for new assets. The JV has approximately $90 million of capacity supplementing the BDC's existing capacity. Given the decline in pricing, we continue to expect repayment activity to remain high for the balance of this year and into 2025. While volume is lighter than we would like it to be in all market segments, our pipeline is still at about 185 deals. We currently have seven new mandates and are working on four add-ons to existing deals. While there can be no assurance that any of these deals will close, all of these credits would fit into the BDC or our JV should we elect to transact. With that, I will turn the call over to Joyceann for additional performance details and a review of our portfolio composition.