Thank you, Tom. Despite the turmoil related to regional banks and the general macro uncertainty, it remains an exciting time to be investing in CLOs, especially at the junior debt and equity portion of the capital structure. While we saw overall liquidity affected in the markets, we have not seen much of an impact with respect to actual credit expense. Loans and CLOs continue to have little to no direct exposure to the regional banks in the news. This allowed our CLO collateral managers to build par through relative value swaps or by reinvesting prepayments with nearly all loans continue to trade below par, repricing activity is effectively non-existent. Rather, we've seen refinancing activity pick up. CFOs and many loan issuers have sought to refinance their 2024 and 2025 loan maturities despite the lower spreads they have locked in currently. In order to extend the runway on their financing, loan issuers have offered lenders higher spreads along with OID, which ultimately benefits the CLO par build and excess spread. The floating rate asset class is one of the most resilient asset classes in existence. Indeed, the Credit Suisse Leveraged Loan Index has posted a 3.11% gain for the first quarter, and its positive momentum continued further into April. While it's still early in the year, it is a good sign that 2023 may follow precedent, whereby a down year in terms of performance was followed by a strong rebound in the next year. This is a testament to the robust nature of the loan asset class. In the CLO market, we saw $34 billion of new issue CLOs in the first quarter of 2023, a strong start to the year, especially considering the volatility in the broader economy. We believe a significant majority of this volume was backed by captive CLO funds, which are generally far less return sensitive. CLO refinancing and reset activity has been negligible as CLO financing spreads have widened. As expected, we began to see defaults gradually rise during the first quarter. There were a total of 10 defaults in the first quarter. As a result, the trailing 12-month default rate stood at 1.32% as of March 31, up from year-end 2022, but still well below the historic average of approximately 3%. Given the volatility with respect to regional banks and the overall macro economy, most bank research stacks now expect defaults to end up around 3% by the end of 2023 due to the higher rate environment and certain stress companies' inability to access the capital markets. That said, we continue to believe our portfolio is well positioned for environments like these. No asset in our portfolio is on non-accrual, and we currently don't foresee any issues with securities in our portfolio this year. As we noted on our prior call, CLO BB debt has withstood multiple economic downturns in the past, experiencing very low long-term default rates. We believe it would take a significant amount of loan defaults, well above the historic average, for EIC to be materially impacted by a default wave. While past performance is obviously not a guarantee of future results, we believe the performance of our portfolio over the past couple of years has demonstrated the resilience of the company's investment strategy. We are currently in a strong position with plenty of dry powder to deploy into new investments via our revolver capacity. Given the uncertainty ahead, we will remain highly selective when evaluating investment opportunities, which we ultimately believe will lead to attractive, risk-adjusted returns for the company's portfolio. With that, I will now turn the call over to our Adviser's Chief Accounting Officer, Lena Umnova.