Thank you, Austin. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our fourth quarter and 2023 fiscal year-end earnings conference call. I'm here today with David Miller, our Co-Chief Executive Officer; Tucker Greene, our Chief Operating Officer; and Stan Matuszewski, our Chief Financial Officer. I'll begin the call by providing an update on the Goldman Sachs private credit platform before providing a brief overview of our fourth quarter results and then discuss the current market environment in more detail. I'll then turn the call over to David and Tucker to describe our portfolio activity and performance before handing it off to Stan, to take us through our financial results. And then finally, we'll open the line for Q&A. So with that, I'd like to provide a brief update of the Goldman Sachs private credit platform and the positive impact on GSBD of being part of it. We are proud to announce that next week marks the second anniversary of our platform integration process. This endeavor brought all of Goldman Sachs' private credit origination and underwriting capabilities as well as various pools of capital with track records that stretch back over 28 years under a single roof within our asset management business. As you may recall, historically, our BDC complex, including GSBD, operated as a separate and distinct platform on the public side of the house that was walled off from the rest of the firm and could not take full advantage of being part of the Goldman Sachs ecosystem. In these two short years, GSBD has been able to take advantage of the full origination capabilities of the broader private credit platform and its scale, enhance our infrastructure and improve upon our underwriting capabilities. I'd like to highlight a few examples. Amidst the volatile market and muted deal environment, the Goldman Sachs private credit platform remained active deploying $12 billion in 2023. The Direct Lending Americas platform comprised the majority of activity with over $6 billion deployed. Furthermore, taking advantage of the broader scale and origination capabilities, GSBD served as agent or lead lender and well above the majority of its new deals in 2023. Second, the team has spent the past two years actively upgrading GSBD's portfolio quality. As a point of reference, in the fourth quarter of 2021, just prior to the integration, GSBD had 89.3% at fair value and first lien senior secured loans, whereas as of the fourth quarter of 2023, that figure stood at 95.3% at fair value. At the same time, in the fourth quarter of 2021, second lien loans comprised 8.2% of the portfolio at fair value versus the fourth quarter of 2023 where second liens made up only 1.9% at fair value. This is a result of actions we discussed in previous quarters, whereby repayments and junior lien positions have allowed us to redeploy capital into attractive opportunities, higher up in the capital structure, and we proactively took marks on legacy junior positions. Finally, our integration has allowed for the significant expansion of our overall deal funnel to provide more proprietary and unique direct lending opportunities for GSBD. For example, since 2004, Goldman Sachs private credit has been the leading lender to the middle market wireless tower sector, deploying close to $7 billion of capital with no losses to date. During the quarter, the Goldman Sachs private credit platform served as a lead arranger on a senior secured facility to Skyway. Founded in 2005, Skyway is a Florida-based wireless tower operator with 445 towers in its portfolio. The facility continues a longstanding Goldman Sachs relationship with the Skyway team, which began with the financing of the Skyway's first portfolio in 2011 before its sale to American Tower, followed by the financing of multiple subsequent tower portfolios, including the current one. This is but – one example of a new set of investment opportunities made available to GSBD, resulting from our integration efforts. Harrington is another example of an investment in the quarter where GSBD utilized the scale of the broader senior direct lending platform to provide a commitment for the entire facility that allowed the sponsor to win the asset, and we served as lead arranger. Harrington is a California-based specialty distributor of precision fluid control products across a variety of industry sectors. We are proud that we've been able to capitalize on the thesis that we communicated to our shareholders and lenders when we integrated GSBD, and we remain committed to leveraging the broader private credit platform for the benefit of GSBD shareholders in the quarters and years ahead. As we announced after the market closed yesterday, our Board declared a first quarter $0.45 per share dividend payable to shareholders of record as of March 28, 2024. This marks the company's 36th consecutive quarter of a $0.45 per share dividend totaling $16.20 per share since our IPO, excluding the special dividends we paid in 2021 post the merger with MMLC. Net asset value was $14.62 per share as of December 31, 2023. This increase was primarily attributable to net investment income exceeding our quarterly dividend, partially offset by net realized and unrealized losses for the quarter. We had previously expressed confidence that deal volumes would increase as the year progressed and the trend indeed continued in the fourth quarter as it did in the third quarter. During the fourth quarter, we reviewed more than 150 investment opportunities across our direct lending Americas platform and deployed capital at strong levels, as David will expand upon in a bit. While we acknowledge that recent deal volumes have improved from recent lows in the past several quarters, we've also witnessed greater competition in the direct lending space, resulting in spread tightening over the past several months. We anticipate that as the overall deal environment improves, supply demand for private credit will align to support spread premiums and tighter lending terms in line with historical private credit underwriting experience. At the same time, it's worth considering that while the broadly syndicated loan market has also reopened, although primarily for near-term refinancings, this is a dynamic that's more impactful to the upper middle market to larger cap segments whereas GSBD is more focused on the core of the middle market. With that, let me turn it over to my Co-CEO, David Miller.