Thanks, Tim. BXMT's results this quarter stand in clear contrast to the negative macro backdrop. We reported $0.79 per share of distributable earnings, an increase of 27% year-over-year. Our earnings covered our dividend by a considerable margin of 127%. Our credit performance was steady with no defaults. Our CECL reserve increase was therefore modest and more than offset by the earnings we retained in excess of our dividends, maintaining our book value. And we ended the quarter with a substantial $1.6 billion of liquidity to insulate our balance sheet and capitalize on opportunities. More than a year into one of the most aggressive Fed tightening cycles in history, the resilience of our business continues to come through in our results. For the outsized income across the 97% of our loans that are performing, offsetting the challenges of the 3% that aren't. (ph) We've taken our reserves up substantially, 2.7 times over the last year. For the strong current dividend we've delivered far outstrips the book-value impact of these reserves for our shareholders. On the current share price that return dynamic is even more powerful. We're trading at a 14.7% dividend yield and an 18.7% earnings yield with significant downside protection given the deep discount to book. Being a lender is distinct from being an equity owner. Today the divergence is particularly meaningful and the economic experience along the way. As a floating-rate lender, our cash flows are growing and the interest we collect on each loan, each payment date derisks our return and that of our investors with every passing quarter. This is the power of current income, a critical differentiator for any business in a volatile period. And in addition to the significant cash flow generation of our portfolio, as a senior lender, we start with a 36 point margin of safety. Credit enhancement that ensures value declines are first absorbed by the equity before we feel any impact on our recovery. Put in a different way, if the value of an asset is down 10%, 20%, or even 30%, the expected outcome is the same, full recovery of our loan. We are well aware of the liquidity challenges and credit headwinds in the market and they are not new in the last 90 days. We proactively positioned to the business to withstand them. Starting with our first principles of low leverage floating rate senior lending and a well-structured match funded balance sheet, and more recently with a conservative strategic positioning we adopted a year ago. At the outset of 2022, we raised the bar on originations, shifted our asset management strategy to reduce credit risk at every opportunity and executed on the plan to bolster liquidity ahead of the volatility, raising $1.2 billion of fresh capital during the year and terming out all of our corporate debt. We will not be immune from credit impact especially in the office market. That is why we have both significant reserves against our most challenged five-rated office loans, over 20% of carrying value on average, implying roughly 50% reduction in real estate value from origination. We are realistic that there will be more challenges over the coming quarters. Hence, our watchlist. But our four-rated and five-rated office loans remained just 7% of our overall portfolio. We have been extremely proactive in managing our office loans. On many of our four-rated office deals, we are in active negotiations for additional equity commitments, something we have already achieved on 16 office loans in the last year, including two on the West Coast, just in the last few weeks. This quarter, we were paid-off on $700 – excuse me, on $300 million of office loans , adding to the $1.5 billion of office repayments we collected last year, and reflecting the benefit of our basis and position as a senior lender. 25% of our overall loan portfolio is U.S. office. While our pre-COVID underwriting did not contemplate today's hybrid work pressures. We've always been deliberate and selective about real estate quality, location and sponsorship. As a result, we believe our office portfolio is meaningfully better positioned than the market as a whole. Across the top U.S. markets, less than 5% of office stock has been built since 2015. But our performing portfolio is nearly 50% post-2015 ground up or substantially renovated new construction. In contrast to the capital starved assets that populate the CMBS market. As a transitional lender our assets by definition have gone through recent CapEx plans. This makes some better positioned to compete for tenants, particularly as capital for renovation and leasing cost becomes more scarce. And we have substantial concentration in Europe and Sunbelt markets. Together 48% of our office portfolio were fundamentals are more stable. Moreover, the office risk is deeply priced in to our market valuation. We are trading today at 0.64 times book-value. The dimension, the losses and fires, it equates to an impairment of over 90% across all of our four-rated and five-rated office loans. Effectively a full principal loss on first mortgage loans. This is extremely punitive and credit outcomes take time during which period we benefit from current income. For the five-rated office loans we put on cost recovery as of the beginning of the year, we have already reduced our basis as we continued to collect interest across all of our loans including needs. And all else equal our highly attractive dividend would remain covered by DE, even if we place all of our four-rated office on cost recovery as well. Across the overall portfolio we are seeing strong performance. For multifamily, hotels, essential retail and many other segments of the real estate market cash flows are robust. So rent growth has decelerated in some areas, absolute rents are still well-above levels that origination. Rising costs and capital markets and liquidity have significantly reduced the new supply pipeline. And as a result, we see business plan progress, as well as repayments despite the highly liquid environment . We had 10 upgrades this quarter, primarily multifamily and hotel loans. This included a four-rated New York City hotel, reflecting a strong cash flow growth over the last 12 months. We see the same recovery story across many of our four-rated hotel loans as well as in the one-two-three risk (ph) rating segment of our portfolio. Our upgrades also included one of our largest office loans. Burbank Studios, a Frank Gehry designed trophy new build asset where construction is substantially completed and Warner Media took occupancy. Unsurprisingly, given the environment we saw some downgrades as well, primarily office loans in New York and San Francisco. Altogether, our weighted average risk rating has moved negligibly in the last year, reflecting improvement across many assets balancing the deterioration we see in some segments of our office portfolio. Today, one-rated and two-rated loans represent 29% of our portfolio, the highest level since before COVID. Nearly, $600 million of loans repaid this quarter with more than half in office and the remainder virtually all in retail and hotel. While we continue to expect the absolute levels of repayments to be tempered, the diversification of our portfolio makes them likely to continue apace. New originations will also be measured, a result of the much lower transaction environment as well as our preference for maintaining maximum optionality in this environment, which we can well afford to do given our robust earnings power. As a balance sheet lender, our earnings are not dependent on the pace of new originations, but rather on the interest income we derive from our well invested portfolio. And that income is at near record levels. There is no doubt, the coming quarters will continue to be challenging. We expect short rates to remain elevated. The failures in the regional banking sector will likely tightened the regulatory environment for all banks. While long-term rates are lower recession concerns are driving sustained dislocation in the capital markets. But for our business, we have not lost sight of the opportunity on the other side of this storm. Direct lending is tailor made for this environment. Many banks will have less money to lend and their capital will be more expensive. With quickly changing markets and more opaque underwriting conditions fewer platforms will have the real time knowledge to skillfully assess opportunities. Available lending capital will become more scarce and command a higher return. While the transaction environment is subdued at the moment, the passage of time will eventually pushed deals into the market. We started the Blackstone real estate debt business in the aftermath of the global financial crisis. Stepping into the void of a similar realignment of the bank regulatory framework. Since then, we have built a $60 billion AUM platform with truly differentiated information, expertise, relationships, and investment talent. On the other side of this turmoil is a singular investment opportunity for our business. And no platform is better equipped to capitalize on it than Blackstone. And with that, I will turn the call over to Tony.