Thanks, Jerry. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I am Mike Comparato, President of FBRT. I would like to start on Slide 12, bringing your attention to the key attributes of our commercial loan portfolio. Our portfolio ended the quarter with $5 billion of assets spread across 145 loans with an average loan size of $34 million. Multifamily continues to be our largest exposure, 78% as of quarter end. As I have said before, we continue to be bullish on the fundamentals of multifamily at the property level and we will continue to focus our portfolio origination there. It is the most recession-resistant asset class, has meaningfully better liquidity than other asset classes due to agency financing and is currently a meaningfully cheaper alternative to home ownership given current housing mortgage rates. During the quarter, we originated four loans at a weighted average spread of 398 basis points. These transactions were primarily a multi-family and hospitality, and were located across the Sunbelt. Although transactional volume remains slow, our originations have picked up meaningfully in the last three to four weeks. We are underwriting very attractive terms on some of the strongest credit profiles we've seen in years. Competition for loans remains subdued with many of the usual suspects remaining side-lined, accumulating cash to address legacy portfolio concerns. Our portfolio is well-positioned, but we expect market distress to continue as more than $1.5 trillion in commercial real estate debt comes due over the next several years. We will not be immune from such issues. However, given our asset allocation and asset quality within the portfolio, we are confident in our ability to navigate this market dislocation. Like most other commercial mortgage REIT portfolios, 90% of our borrowers have interest rate caps activated and have not meaningfully felt the effect of the increase in interest rates. Loan maturity continues to be the catalyst for action to be taken. Predicting borrower behavior is very difficult in this environment. We are proactive in getting ahead of issues with borrowers, extending or modifying loans now when appropriate and resolving a manageable number of loans per quarter. To date, we're actually quite pleased with borrower behavior, both their financial commitment to assets and from a communication standpoint. As things stand today, we do not expect to see the extent of dislocation we've seen in office spread to other asset classes. Office is fundamentally challenged as we have discussed on prior calls, and we have not seen any improvement in conditions. Our office exposure has been minimally reduced but still remains at 6%. Our largest office loan is triple net leased for over 15 years to a large public company as our corporate headquarters and our traditional multi-tenant office exposure when excluding this loan has an average loan size of only $22.4 million. Slide 14 summarizes our watch-list loans. As Rich mentioned, we have three loans on watch-list as of September 30th, representing approximately $83 million in value with no additions this quarter -- no new additions this quarter. Two assets were removed from our watch-list loan. One loan, a garden-style apartment community was removed by way of an upgrade from a 4 rating to a 3 rating following our quarterly asset review process, and that loan was subsequently paid off after quarter end. The other loan, a CBD office complex was taken as REO during the quarter. We took an asset-specific reserve on this loan during the second quarter. The three loans that remain on watch-list and are risk rated 4 were a CBD high-rise office building in Denver, Colorado, a suburban class A office building in Alpharetta, Georgia, and a 16 building apartment complex in Lubbock, Texas that was subsequently taken as REO in Q4 with a carrying value of $12 million or approximately 50,000 per unit. As Rich mentioned, our total REO positions at quarter end stood at 2. We liquidated the St. Louis office property during the quarter with a carrying value of $11.8 million. We also foreclosed on the Portland office property in Q3 with a quarter ending value of $18.8 million. The vast majority of REO exposure sits within the Walgreens retail portfolio. We sold one store during the quarter at a 5.5 cap, leaving us with 23 stores with a carrying value of approximately $91 million. As we mentioned last quarter, we intend to liquidate this portfolio as the market permits. However, we are patient sellers and comfortable holding these assets until we reach pricing levels that we feel are appropriate. In aggregate, our foreclosure REO balance ended the quarter slightly lower at $110 million, was approximately 1.9% of our total assets. With that, I would like to turn it back to the operator to begin the Q&A session.