Thank you, operator. Good morning and thank you to those of you joining us on the Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance fourth quarter 2023 earnings call. I am joined as usual today by Scott Weiner, our Chief Investment Officer; and Anastasia Mironova, our Chief Financial Officer. In many ways, the start of 2024 feels very much like where we were at the start of 2023 for the commercial real estate sector. If you recall, entering 2023, there was significant negative sentiment concerning commercial real estate, fueled by concerns over the impact of elevated interest rates on valuations and pending debt maturities, uncertainty on the long-term use case for office properties and a lot of consensus with respect to both the path of the economy and the future trajectory of interest rates. The Fed continuing to raise rates in the first half of 2023 and the notable volatility in the 10-year treasury rates further added to the concern and uncertainty in the market. In addition, the failure of several notable regional banks, coupled with increased reserves and negative commentary from money center banks regarding their real estate portfolios further added to the generally pessimistic perspective. While there were some notable transactions throughout 2023, which started the process of revaluing real estate in a higher interest rate environment, but overall transaction volume was significantly lower than recent years as market participants, including owners, lenders, potential buyers and sellers all chose to play for time and remain cautious in the face of an uncertain economic and interest rate environment. As we enter 2024, there is increasing confidence in the Fed’s ability to engineer some type of soft landing and expectations of 100 to 150 bps of Fed rate cuts throughout the year. On the long end, the 10-year is essentially exactly where it was at the beginning of 2023. And at present, fears of that rate moving higher, as it quickly did last year, are muted. However, while there may be more optimism with respect to the economy and rates, the narrative around commercial real estate continues to focus on further asset value degradation. There is still much to be done to address loan maturities and asset level capital structures in a higher rate environment in addition to the lingering uncertainty over the long-term use case for certain assets. Pivoting away from the value debate, operating performance across much of commercial real estate has remained stable to positive. Notable exceptions include certain office markets as well as pockets of the multifamily sector that have begun to experience declining rent growth in the face of elevated supply. Over the long-term, we expect that property level operating performance will be closely aligned with the broader macroeconomic climate, and many property sectors will benefit from a notable decrease in new supply over the last few years. With respect to ARI, 2023 was a year focused on proactive asset management and maintaining excess liquidity while expanding and diversifying financing sources. Given the tailwinds from higher base rates, ARI achieved strong distributable earnings, which comfortably covered the dividend and demonstrated the earnings power of the company’s floating rate loan portfolio. During the fourth quarter, ARI strategically pivoted and deployed $536 million into two new loan transactions and the upsizing of an existing loan as we identified compelling opportunities to originate loans at attractive pricing with recent valuation, strong credit structures and lower LTVs. All three of these loans secured properties in Europe. Shifting to the portfolio. At year-end, ARI had 50 loans, totaling $8.4 billion. ARI received $1.2 billion in loan repayments and sales during 2023, including $270 million from office loans. Throughout the year, our team remained actively engaged with ARI’s borrowers, negotiating and completing paydowns and extensions where appropriate. For ARI’s focus assets, the 2 REO hotels produced stable cash flow throughout the year, with the Washington, D.C. asset generating NOI from hotel operations above pre-pandemic levels. With respect to Steinway, we closed on the sale of 1 unit in the fourth quarter, and there are 2 more units under contract. There are also active negotiations on a handful of additional units. However, nothing is done until it is done. Based on recent activity at the building, our views have not changed with respect to the nominal achievable value on sellout. But as a reminder, accounting does require a present value assessment of achievable value. Recent activity was generally consistent with previous estimates, and as such, no additional reserve was recorded during the fourth quarter. Any future change to the reserve level will be based upon assessment of both the potential nominal value of remaining units as well as the expected timing of realization. Before I turn the call over to Anastasia, let me make a few comments on ARI’s quarterly dividend. As a reminder, our quarterly dividend run rate is $0.35 per share, and it has been at that level since we proactively reduced the dividend right at the beginning of the pandemic in 2020. As I have stated many times previously, the dividend is ultimately dependent on board action, and it is reviewed and discussed and ultimately declared by the Board on a quarterly basis. While it is subject to that Board approval, at present, our current modeling for the future indicates that we remain comfortable with the current dividend level of $0.35 per share. We will obviously review it with the Board on a go-forward basis, but in light of questions that we anticipated, I wanted to provide that context at this time. With that, I will turn the question over to Anastasia.