Thanks, Jerry, and good morning, everyone. I'm going to start on Slide 16. Our core portfolio ended the quarter at $4.5 billion across 145 loans with multifamily making up 74%. In today's market, generating strong credit returns takes more than capital to take the broad product offering. While spreads have compressed, we still see attractive opportunities. BSP continues to stand out as a flexible and consistent lender in the market with the ability to structure loans that meet our risk return profile while staying primarily in the senior portion of the capital stack. Before turning to our asset performance, I wanted to spend a little time on the broader CRE market. For the last few years, borrowers and lenders have tried to wait out market dislocation, hoping rate cuts and better days would arise. To date, they haven't. What's next is likely a period of acceptance. debt funds, mortgage REITs, banks and life companies will need to mark loans appropriately and move capital. That reset is what brings healthy market functionality back, and we welcome it. We're also watching long-term rates settle into a higher range. Treasury issuance isn't slowing, and we still expect Fed cuts later this year. If we do see a more dovish Fed share in 2026, we should see a steepening yield curve, resulting in more demand for shorter duration credit. The 10-year U.S. Treasury has always been the benchmark of the CRE credit space, and it's been the benchmark for decades. Unless there is a 3 handle on the 10-year, expect 5-year and shorter duration loans to dominate the sector. Additionally, there is no shortage of capital in the market today. Credit markets are flushed with liquidity, and there's a tremendous amount of equity on the sidelines ready to step in once assets start to clear. On the property side, multifamily fundamentals are improving. New supply is slowing and slowing meaningfully, concessions are burning off and in certain markets, rent growth is reemerging, especially in newer, higher-quality assets. Legacy 1970s and 1980s vintage stock will lag in a recovery, but strong assets in strong markets are beginning to see positive momentum. We're also seeing healthy pricing signals. Cap rate tiering is back with real differentiation based on asset quality and market strength. That has been painful for buyers that closed acquisitions in late 2021, early 2022, but it's ultimately the correct dynamic, one that supports more rational equity investing and lending. Moving on to FBRT's portfolio, let's look at Slide 18. Today, we are down to 44% of our loan commitments, consisting of loans originated before the interest rate hikes. The majority of this collateral is multifamily, representing $1.7 billion or 79%, followed by hospitality at $196 million or 9%. 89% of these legacy loans are risk rated at 2 or 3, with the vast majority scheduled to mature by the end of 2026. We've addressed the positions currently requiring attention, and those are reflected on our watch list. Notably, total office exposure when adjusting for our net lease headquarter asset and prior quarter write-downs is only $105 million, 2.2% of total assets, not just legacy assets. That exposure is spread across 4 loans with an average loan size just under $18 million, a weighted average of $56 per square foot and 2 REO assets, one of which is currently under contract. Slide 20 summarizes our watch list. Our watch list includes 8 positions. We continue to actively manage each and borrower engagement remains high. Within our positions, one is the Georgia office building that was extended in January with a principal paydown and has remained current on payments. The borrower on the 307-unit student housing property in Norfolk, Virginia is looking to liquidate the asset within the next 3 to 6 months. We added a Phoenix office building with a $13.5 million loan this quarter following the government lease termination. The borrower is currently marketing that asset for sale. The other watch list loans are multifamily deals from 2021 and 2022 that are behind on business plan. We're in active dialogue with those borrowers, and one of the loans is under contract to be sold at par with a meaningful nonrefundable deposit, and we expect that sale to close imminently. While the watch list count ticked up slightly, request for modifications continue to slow, which is another sign that FBRT is in the later innings of this cycle, specifically because we have been proactively addressing underperforming assets for years. Slide 21 covers our foreclosure REO portfolio. Over the past 2 years, we've taken 19 properties into REO, totaling roughly $560 million in UPB. 10 of those have been sold for $270 million, in the aggregate above our principal balance at the time of foreclosure, including $56 million of sales this quarter. Our remaining 9 foreclosure REO positions are 82% multifamily assets and at various stages of stabilization. Most importantly, our largest REO asset, a 472-unit multifamily asset in Raleigh, North Carolina, just achieved 90% occupancy. As with past sales, we'll rely on our asset management team to drive value before bringing them to market. Currently, 2 REO assets are under contract with another 2 under letter of intent and more properties are going to market for sale in Q3. Jerry already provided some quantitative feedback on NewPoint. I would add that after 30 days post-closing, my confidence and conviction in the acquisition has only grown. The team is incredibly strong and early collaboration, especially around cross-selling products has been excellent. We now have more than 300 professionals across 34 states, making us one of the largest middle market platforms in the country. The strategic fit between FBRT and NewPoint is clear. Finally, as Rich noted, our stock continues to trade at a meaningful discount to book value. The market seems to be pricing in substantial unrealized losses in our legacy or pre-rate hike portfolio. To put that into context, for our book value to match the current stock price, we would need to recognize approximately $450 million in additional loan losses, $450 million. In current market conditions, that scenario is simply not realistic. In fact, we feel very good about our legacy book. It's 79% multifamily or $1.7 billion. Over the past 8 quarters, we have received $1.5 billion in payoffs at par or better on 2021 and 2022 originated multifamily loans, including a $43 million payoff last week. Our multifamily REO sales in the aggregate have been sold above our principal balance at the time of foreclosure, and those liquidations occurred in a tougher market environment than what we face today. We have $196 million of legacy hotel loans with the vast majority performing well and risk rated at 2 with none on watch list. Lastly, as I already mentioned, we only have $105 million of legacy office exposure. We re-underwrite every loan in this portfolio quarterly. And based on current market conditions and recent outcomes on loan payoffs and REO sales, I can say with absolute conviction that losses anywhere near the implied $450 million level are highly, highly unlikely. Losses of that magnitude would suggest that every legacy loan in our portfolio is valued at less than $0.80 on the dollar. Yet in the aggregate, we haven't realized any losses on our legacy multifamily loans or liquidated multifamily REO, and we've received $1.5 billion in payoffs from peak vintage multifamily originations. It is very, very difficult to connect these dots. In short, we believe the current stock price is meaningfully undervalued. With that, I would like to turn it back to the operator and begin the Q&A session.