Thank you, Christine. I’m going to make comments about sort of four different topics today. One is the farm economy, generally, land values, our cost control efforts and our continuing discount to the net asset value of the underlying assets we own. So starting with the farm economy, we’re in an environment today, where commodity prices for the primary row crops like corn and soybeans and wheat are lower than they have been in the past several years. That is leading to certain challenges for farmers in terms of their cash flow and the strength of their balance sheets. As is typical though, this is by no means a crisis. There are a few farmers facing gradual levels of distress. But there is no broad-based economic problems in the farm belt. This is highly consistent with what has happened in the past. And for me, I am now on probably cycle 5 or 6 in my career. You go into a relatively lower commodity price phase, a few of the weaker farmers, from a financial point of view, get into trouble, but the overall market stays quite stable and quite strong. And we expect that to be exactly the same this time. We do anticipate still getting modest rent increases on the rent rolls that we do and we do not anticipate any significant change in our bad debt levels. And as you all probably know, our bad debt levels are almost zero, not zero. Turning just a second to the West Coast markets, their commodity prices are also somewhat challenged, although there are some bright spots, like citrus, where pricing is actually higher than it’s been in the last couple of years. The major challenges, though, in California assets continue to be the same. Both the absolute water risk, what I call political water risk, because of the rules and regulations which sometimes don’t line up with the true reality of water and then finally, continuing sort of increases in labor costs for the farmers out there coming out of what in my perspective are sort of bad policies coming out of Sacramento. But those are the challenges there, but again, similar to the grain belt, not expecting any major crisis in that region. Turning for a second the land values, land values have sort of in the row crop regions hit a bit of a plateau in this industry. A plateau is kind of what down feels like. As we all know, there is a sort of 6% per annum long-term average appreciation to the underlying assets. That of course does not come like clockwork. It comes a little bit of a lumpy style. And to refresh your memory, we have seen really, really high appreciation rates for the last 3 or so years, possibly as high as 15% or 20% on some assets in some regions. And so, we are going to see the kind of revert to the long-term mean occur. And how that occurs is you’ll go through a period where you get almost no appreciation in assets for a year or two. And that’s how you kind of stay at that long-term approximately 6% appreciation factor. There what that means in kind of a practical matter, if you are reading newspapers in the in the U.S. Midwest, what’s gone away from the sales of high-quality farmland are still very, very strong. Best land in Illinois and Iowa is easily $16,000 to $18,000 an acre virtually every time you try to sell it or buy it. But those sort of 20,000 plus sales that make headlines, there is frankly less of those than there were. We’ve never marked our internal marks that we carry on our portfolio in terms of understanding what things are worth. We never use those super high outlier transactions. They are just not where the market is. We tend to use sort of where is the 75% of deals are getting done in X price range. That’s the price range we want to use when we think about the value of our portfolio. And we don’t think that’s going to go down very much. It’s hard to even measure a 2% or 3% move either way, but it’s certainly a very tight bracket. We don’t see any, any real risk in the row crop region of the portfolio for any kind of asset price declines. Turning then to California. California is a little different and people are frustrated about the water and the labor cost issues I talked about. Many institutions are concerned about their exposure in that region. As I’ve said in prior phone calls, we will gradually, over time, lessen our exposure to that region, because of those factors. Cost cutting, as you all know, we changed the CFO role inside the organization. During the quarter, we had our CFO, James Gilligan, lead the company. We promoted the long-term top accountants up into the CFO role. Susan Landi, she will speak here later today. We just didn’t need that level of staffing in the finance department when we are in a position like we are now, where we are not frankly, growing very much. We are not raising a lot of capital and we had more staffing at higher costs than made sense. James was a wonderful member of the team. We made as per his employment agreement and that the payout he was permitted to get and he deserved it. This is all about cost cutting, not about performance and Susan Landi has been the top CPA in the company for many years and will do a great job as our CFO and help limit our overheads in the in the home office in Denver. Then finally, I am like a broken record on this, but I always want to make it clear, we continue to believe we trade at a deep, deep discount to our net asset value. I think that discount could be north of $4 or $5 a share. It is absolutely huge. We will continue to do our best to close that gap through things like asset sales and arbitraging the private market values for our assets against the public market discount. This is not a situation which we are going to allow to sit there forever. As a REIT, we are obviously constrained in the kinds of the numbers of deals we can do in any year by the tax law. And so we’ll stay in compliance with that. But we will continue to drive as we did in the ‘23 calendar year to arbitrage the high private market values for our assets against the discounts in the public market. With that, I’m going to turn it over to Luca to make some additional comments.