Thanks, Katherine. Good morning, and thanks to all of you for joining us on our earnings call today. In addition to Katherine, I am joined today by Mike Boyle, our President, and our Chief Financial Officer, Amit Joshi. In terms of the agenda for the call, I will start with an overview of our fourth quarter and 2025 full-year results, and then discuss the broader market environment and our positioning. Thereafter, Mike and Amit will discuss our investment portfolio and financial results in greater detail, and we will leave some time for questions at the end as usual. Beginning with our financial results, net investment income per share for the fourth quarter was $0.46, representing an annualized yield of 10.6% on equity. Our net investment income covered our base dividend of $0.42 per share by 110%. Q4 earnings per share were $0.43, representing an annualized return on equity of 9.9%. For the full year 2025, net investment income per share was $1.88, or an 11.1% return on equity. 2025 earnings per share were $1.53, representing a 9% return on equity. We are pleased to report that these results reinforce the consistency of our positive performance for our shareholders. Over the prior three-year and five-year periods, BCSF consistently delivered an annualized ROE of 10%, driven by strong earnings supported by healthy credit performance and fundamentals across our portfolio. Subsequent to quarter end, our Board declared a first quarter dividend equal to $0.42 per share, and payable to record date holders as of 03/16/2026. This represents a 9.8% annualized rate on ending book value as of December 31. Turning to the market today and how we are navigating the current environment, under the backdrop of some of the recent private credit headlines surrounding credit quality and software/AI disruption risk, we have been pleased to see new deal activity levels pick up throughout 2025 and into the fourth quarter, driven by higher new LBO activities and continued add-on activities, as underlying economic indicators have remained constructive for new investments. In today’s market, BCSF continues to benefit from Bain Capital’s private credit platform’s longstanding presence in the middle market. Consistent with our long-term focus, we have been staying active within our market segment in the core middle market where we believe we can demonstrate a greater spread premium and maintain tighter underwriting standards with control of our debt tranches. As the markets have continued to be competitive, our longstanding presence in this segment has positioned us well with our sponsor relationships to be a trusted partner and capital provider. We have been able to achieve a greater spread premium while maintaining conservative capital structures and tight documentation. The weighted average spread on our new first lien originations during the quarter was 535 basis points, with net leverage of 4.6 times. The weighted average spread on our new originations during 2025 was 560 basis points. Our spread levels compared favorably to the average sponsored middle market first lien loans, which were approximately 500 basis points both in the fourth quarter and throughout the year. Importantly, we have maintained discipline with our capital base across our private credit platform, which has allowed us to pick the spots where we want to invest across the market. The cornerstone of our investment philosophy continues to be rigorous, fundamental due diligence at the industry, company, and individual security level. BCSF benefits from not only our dedicated private credit investment team that brings deep experience and specialization across industries, regions, and capital structures, but also from expertise across our firm that drives collaboration and deeper industry insights to source, diligence, and underwrite investments, bringing the power of the Bain Capital platform to our investors. When underwriting and managing across our portfolio, this approach leads us to lean in and out of certain sectors over time, and not be left beholden to investing just in sectors that may be driving the highest new deal volumes in the market. For example, our investors may recall that BCSF has historically had lower exposure to healthcare investments such as physician practice management companies, as we shied away from many of these deals in the private credit markets during a period of high volumes, as these transactions typically came with less favorable terms and structures in our view. Today, software and technology have been top of mind given the increased volatility in the public sector due to potential AI disruption. It has also been one of the largest sector allocations across the private credit market and garnered a lot of recent private market headlines, so we wanted to spend some time touching on our exposure and approach. This is a sector that Bain Capital has been investing in for quite some time, but notably also one in which we maintain a selective underwriting approach. Bain Capital Credit has dedicated professionals that focus on technology within our private credit group, further supported by dedicated industry research resources across our broader credit team and the firm more broadly, as we seek to harness the insights and knowledge across other business units such as Ventures, Tech Opportunities, Private Equity, and more. High-tech industries is one of our top sector exposures; however, it only comprises approximately 11% of BCSF’s total portfolio. Our focus within the sector over the years has been on systems-of-record software and/or highly specialized vertical software. We generally look for and support tier-one enterprise software assets that provide mission-critical products that have demonstrated value propositions, exhibit strong growth on a recurring revenue base across a highly diversified customer base, have several viable exit strategies, and are led by talented management teams able to effectively grow the business. We also seek to partner with private equity sponsors with extensive tech and software expertise and clear value creation plans to generate positive cash flow through their ownership, and we tailor our loan terms and structure to mirror those plans. Software categories have always had wide variability in levels of certain types of risks or credit attributes. The discourse about AI disruption over the last few years is largely focused on LMMs, or large multi model multimodal models, which increasingly excel at summarizing and analyzing disparate sets of data. While this potential for AI disruption is not a new phenomenon, given the recent volatility across public software markets, we have reevaluated each of our portfolio companies by qualitative criteria regarding the risk of AI replacement. Overall, we believe our portfolio has low risk to AI disruption and is, in fact, more likely to be a natural beneficiary of AI functionality than other types of software, and has many of the positive credit attributes for which we have historically screened. Our software companies have demonstrated strong credit fundamentals, where we have seen healthy levels of earnings growth across our borrowers since underwriting. As of year end, median LTV is approximately 34%, even adjusting for current enterprise value multiples since close, and these borrowers have demonstrated healthy interest coverage of 1.7 times. Turning to our broader portfolio, credit fundamentals across our underlying companies have remained resilient. At year end, median net leverage across our borrowers was 4.7 times, unchanged from the prior quarter and stable from 4.8 times on a year-over-year basis. Median interest coverage is also healthy at 2.0 times. Watchlist names comprise approximately 5% of our overall portfolio at fair value, which is also consistent with recent quarters. These names have also remained relatively stable and include a handful of companies that have been facing ongoing challenges in recent years due to various headwinds such as navigating through certain end-market cyclicality, continued COVID headwinds, and various idiosyncratic underperformance. Our position in the process name is comprised largely of first lien loans, so we feel confident about our positioning within those capital structures. Nonaccruals remain low across our portfolio at 1.5% at amortized cost and 0.8% at fair value as of year end. This was stable quarter over quarter, and no new companies were added to nonaccrual during the fourth quarter. Taking all of this together, the overall health and credit quality of our portfolio remains on solid footing, and we believe there is a disconnect versus where the market trading valuations are today in the BDC sector, especially with regard to BCSF. Looking ahead, we believe the company is well positioned to drive attractive earnings for our shareholders given our platform’s positioning and investment discipline in the core middle market as well as stable credit performance. We believe BCSF can maintain its regular $0.42 per share dividend in the current environment. While we expect to face earnings headwinds ahead from a lower rate environment and the maturities of our lower-cost unsecured notes, we believe there are several future growth levers for the company to help offset this, including higher earnings from select joint venture and ABL investments and other types of income as new M&A deal volumes increase. We also have healthy levels of spillover income totaling $1.29 per share, equal to over three times our regular dividend level. I will now turn the call over to Michael John Boyle, our President, to walk through our investment portfolio in greater detail.