Thanks, Katherine and good morning and thanks to all of you for joining us here on our earnings call. I am also joined today by Mike Boyle, our President; and our Chief Financial Officer, Amit Joshi. As usual, in terms of agenda for the call, I’ll start with an overview of our first quarter results and then provide some thoughts on our performance, the current market environment positioning. Thereafter, Mike and Amit will discuss our investment portfolio and financial results in great detail. As usual, we’ll also leave some time for questions at the end. So yesterday, after closed, we delivered solid first quarter results. Q1 net investment income per share was $0.50, representing an annualized yield on book value of 11.3%. Our net investment income was well in excess of our regular dividend, with 119% dividend coverage. Q1 earnings per share were $0.44, reflecting an annualized return on book value of 10.0%. Our results were driven by high-quality interest income earned from our middle-market borrowers and stable credit performance across our portfolio. Our net asset value per share was $17.64, down $0.01 per share from the prior quarter end. Subsequent to quarter end, our Board declared a second quarter dividend equal to $0.42 per share payable to record date holders as of June 16, 2025. The Board also declared an additional dividend of $0.03 per share for shareholders of record as of June 16, 2025 as we previously announced in February. The total dividends for the second quarter to $0.45 per share or a 10.2% annualized return on ending value as of March 31, which we believe represents an attractive yield for our shareholders. The first quarter was [Technical Difficulty] a busy start to the year beginning in January, while volumes and trends throughout the quarter, increased volatility and uncertainty experienced across the broader market. Middle-market direct lending volumes continue to see compression amid high levels of competition, which were steepest across the upper [Technical Difficulty]. We are certainly not immune to increase competition within the core part of the market although we seek to be disciplined capital providers when we underwrite new capital structures, price the risk we take, the reward we received. Q1 BCSF’s gross originations were $277 million down 31% year-over-year. We remain selective in our underwriting approach and continue to face middle-market companies within the core part of the market. The median weighted average EBITDA of the borrowers during the quarter were approximately $23 million and $3 million respectively. The weighted average spread on our first lien originations was over 140 basis points. Many of the core tenants that we value in our direct strategy as higher spread volumes, stronger lender controls through credit documentation, containing financial covenants and having majority control positions within the small lender group are much more amenable in this segment of the market. Notably, these are attributes that we believe are increasingly important during periods of greater volatility. So 97% of our Q1 originations to new companies were structured with documentation containing financial covenants tied to management’s forecast. Majority control positions in over 78% of these debt tranches, allowing us to drive eventual outcomes at our discretion. These statistics are consistent with our broader portfolio showing our continued focus on these core tenants. Credit quality and fundamentals continue to be solid across our portfolio. Investments on non-accrual represented 1.4%, 0.7% at amortized cost and fair value respectively as of March 31. Overall, liquidity [Technical Difficulty] of total available liquidity across undrawn capacity on our revolving creditability, cash and net settled trades. We ended the first quarter at a net leverage rate to 1.17x, which falls within our target leverage ratio on a net basis of 1.0x to 1.25x and positions us well with ample dry powder in the current environment. Following the U.S. government’s tariff announcements in early April, we performed a portfolio review to identify potential individual exposure to higher tariffs. While there is still uncertainty around the timing and height of eventual tariffs, given the fluid situation and ongoing developments, only a small portion of BCSF’s portfolio companies were estimated to have a direct tariff exposure. This limited exposure to exogenous factors identified by our team aligns with various facets of our investment strategy, including a focus on the core middle-market, asset-light, high free cash flow businesses, domestic manufacturing and favoring certain industries such as software, healthcare, business services and financial services. Notably, our aerospace and defense investments are not expected to have high direct impacts from tariffs as our exposure within this segment includes service providers and manufacturers with overwhelmingly domestic customer bases and supply chains. While it is still too early to assess the longer term impact of tariffs on the broader economy, we remain focused on the potential downstream effects of these and other current administration policies that could drive inflation higher, lower economic growth and lead to a potential recessionary environment. Bain Capital’s private credit group has over 25 years of experience and is well equipped to navigate the current environment as our professionals have successfully navigated multiple market cycles and periods of disruptions in the past. And we remain focused on prudently managing our portfolio. I will now turn the call over to Mike Boyle, our President, to walk through our investment portfolio in greater detail.