Thank you, Tom. We continue to be excited about the investment opportunities within the CLO market, in particular, the junior debt and equity portions of the capital structure. EIC has been able to successfully capitalize on the elevated rate environment due to the floating rate nature of our underlying portfolio. During the quarter, we fully deployed the proceeds from our ATM issuance and EICB preferred offering and in total deployed nearly $51 million in gross capital into attractive CLO junior debt and CLO equity purchases. The weighted average effective yield of the CLO purchases during the quarter was a robust 15%. We continue to see attractive return profiles in the secondary market. Our CLO collateral managers continue to be able to build par through relative value credit suction or by reinvesting prepayments into discounted loans. Loan issuers remain proactive in seeking to push out their near-term loan maturities in order to extend the runway on their financing despite the lower spreads they have locked in currently. As a result, many loan issuers are offering lenders higher spreads along with OID, which ultimately benefits CLOs through car build and increasing excess spread. The Credit Suisse Leveraged Loan Index continued its momentum from the first half of the year and is up 10% year-to-date as of September 30, 2023. And thanks to the loan market rallying this year, the JPM CLO BB Index is up 16% year-to-date as of September 30, and the company's GAAP ROE is up nearly 20% year-to-date as of September 30 as well. In the CLO market, we saw $28 billion of new CLO issuance in the third quarter of 2023 as the market remains on pace to once again eclipse the $100 billion mark. As in the first half of the year, we believe a significant portion of the volume was backed by captive CLO funds, which are generally far less return sensitive. CLO refinancing and reset activity has picked up slightly for some specific second half 2022 vintage CLOs with one-year non-call periods but otherwise remains basically shut. There were a total of five syndicated loan defaults in the third quarter down from 15% in the prior quarter. In fact, there were no defaults in the month of September, again, evidence of the resilience of senior secured loans and thus, CLOs despite various macro concerns. As a result, the trailing 12-month default rate declined to 1.3% as of September 30, well below historical averages. We continue to believe our portfolio is well positioned for environments like these, a 100% of our portfolio of CLO debt and CLO equity is paying current distributions. As we've consistently noted, 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 historical average, coupled with limited loan price volatility 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 few years has demonstrate the resilience of the company's investment strategy. Entering the tail end of the year, we remain in a very strong position with material dry powder to deploy into new investments via cash and our revolver capacity. We will continue to be opportunistic and will act where we believe we can achieve compelling 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.