Thank you, Richard. For the second quarter of 2024, CMTG reported a GAAP net loss of $0.09 per share and distributable earnings of $0.20 per share. Distributable earnings per share prior to realized losses were $0.21 per share, which was in line with the first quarter result of $0.20 per share. The New York City area hotel portfolio had a stronger second quarter due to expected seasonality, which resulted in a $0.05 per share improvement in earnings compared to last quarter. This was partially offset by the impact of a New York land loan placed on nonaccrual during the quarter. I'll provide additional information on the nonaccrual loan later in the call. Beginning with the left side of the balance sheet, CMTG's loan portfolio grew slightly to $6.8 billion at June 30th compared to $6.7 billion at March 31st. The quarter-over-quarter change is attributable to follow-on fundings of $143 million, offset by the impact of partial loan repayments totaling $41 million. At quarter end, our multifamily portfolio was unchanged compared to the prior quarter, representing our largest exposure at 40% of the portfolio. As Richard mentioned, the supply/demand imbalance continues to benefit the housing market, and we remain bullish on the long-term fundamentals of the sector. However, borrowers continue to experience challenges as they are adversely affected by higher interest rates, elevating their cost of carry, among other items. As a result, during the quarter, we downgraded three loans to a four-risk rating, representing a total carrying value of $370 million. Two of these loans with a UPB of $161 million are collateralized by multifamily assets located in the Dallas MSA with the same sponsor. The current interest rate environments placed significant pressure on the sponsor's ability to effectively operate their broader portfolio. The downgrades of these loans are driven primarily by this pressure on the sponsor rather than by underlying long-term real estate fundamentals, we are likely to take ownership of these assets, along with other for rated multifamily loans in the coming quarters. The third loan, which is unencumbered, that was downgraded this quarter was collateralized by a for-sale condo project in California. In this instance, the sponsor who relied on offshore capital sources has experienced financial difficulty outside of this particular investment. Prior to defaulting on the loan, the sponsor successfully sold a number of condo units at levels well above CMTG's basis per square foot. However, the sponsor has experienced financial difficulty, and we have been working with them to find a path to resolving this loan, including a loan restructuring loan sale, our REO. There were no new fibrate loans this quarter. We did, however, place an existing 4-rated land loan on nonaccrual status. The loan is a carrying value of $88 million and is collateralized by a development site in New York City that is zoned for mixed-use building. This loan has been risk rated of force since the fourth quarter of 2023 as the borrower has failed to make progress towards its business plan and has been delinquent in paying interest. At June 30, total CECL reserves as a percentage of UPB increased to 3.1% compared to 2.6% for the prior quarter. Specific CECL reserves represented 23.1% of the UPB of our loans with specific CECL reserves. The general CECL reserve of 2.1% of the UPB was comprised of 3.3% of the UPB on for rated loans and 1.5% of the UPB on the remaining loans. During the quarter, we recorded provisions for CECL reserves of $34 million or $0.24 per share. The increase in the general CECL reserve is primarily a result of increases in expected loan duration, increases in third-party historical loss rate data on similar loans and to a lesser extent, changes in risk ratings and accrual status of loans in our portfolio. Now, turning to financing and liquidity. At June 30, we reported $191 million in total liquidity, which includes cash and approved and undrawn credit capacity based on existing collateral. Unencumbered assets were comprised of loans totaling $490 million of UPB, of which 94% were senior loans and our mixed-use REO with a carrying value of $146 million. These unencumbered assets provide us with additional flexibility in maintaining our desired levels of liquidity. Subsequent to quarter end, repayment activity continues to accelerate. We received full repayments of three loans totaling $244 million of UPB, a $22 million loan collateralized by a build-to-rent portfolio, a $99 million loan collateralized by an industrial asset and finally, a $123 million loan collateralized by a 4-rated New York City office loan. This loan had been risk rated of 4 since the fourth quarter of 2023. The transaction reduced our office exposure and reduced our overall leverage. Year-to-date, we have received a total of $873 million of loan proceeds through payoffs or loan sales. Of that amount, loans totaling approximately $646 million were construction loans. In addition, loans totaling approximately $400 million were risk-rated for, demonstrating continued progress in resolving watch-list loans. Before turning the call to the operator, I'd also like to provide some additional color with regard to certain of our financing arrangements with the most restrictive financial covenants. During the second quarter, we significantly expanded our relationship with our largest financing counterparty, while also completing covenant modifications on each of our repurchase facilities. Overall, we reduced our minimum required interest coverage levels and tangible net worth covenant levels. We believe that these changes provide us with needed flexibility to preserve an enhanced book value while also demonstrating our ability to work constructively with our various financing counterparties through challenging market conditions. Operator, I would now like to open the call for questions.