Thank you, Austin. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter 2025 earnings conference call. I am here today with our co-CEO David Miller, our COO, Tucker Greene, our CFO Stan Matuszewski. I’ll start the call with our thoughts on recent performance in light of a challenging macro environment and pivot to our investing activity of framing how GSBD is positioned heading into the second quarter. I’ll then turn the call over to David and Tucker to describe our portfolio activity and performance in more detail before handing it over to Stan to take us through our financial results. And finally, we will open the line for Question-And-Answer-Session. Let’s start by addressing macro-economic conditions, tariffs and a potential impact on the portfolio and deal flow. With respect to the portfolio as mentioned on our previous call, we conducted an in-depth company-by-company analysis to cross our entire direct lending portfolio with respect to tax exposure and a potential recessionary or even stag flationary environment. While the second and third order effects remain difficult to quantify, the initial diagnosis is that only 4 out of our 163 companies within GSBD or approximately 3% of fair value are considered to have high exposure primarily due to their supply chain dependencies in China. The results of our analysis are not surprising as a vast majority of our portfolio companies are asset light with minimal exposure to international supply chains, are domiciled in the U.S. serving predominantly U.S. customers, and operate primarily within service based industries such as software, healthcare and mission critical business services. In addition, we find comfort in where the GSBD portfolio sits in the capital stack with over 96% of the investments in first lien risk and an attractive loan to value. With respect to deal flow, as a result of the tariff induced market volatility, the long awaited resurgence of new M&A activity has been further pushed back. However, the deals that were already in process generally pivoted their financing back from the public syndicated market to direct lending. In addition, we continue to see deal flow for businesses that are shielded from tariff exposure again primarily in services related industries where private equity buyers are still prepared to pay healthy multiples. We have continued to use our proximity to our investment banking franchise as a competitive advantage for origination. In addition, market fundamentals continue to suggest the current lack of deal flow will eventually change as sponsors face mounting DPI pressure. With respect to all in yields, our focus for new investments is in the low to mid 9% range with weighted average spreads of our broader platform's new investments widening modestly quarter-over-quarter from 479 basis points to 510 basis points. Now turning to our first quarter results, our net investment income per share for the quarter was $0.42 and net asset value per share was $13.20 as of quarter end, a decrease of 1.6% relative to the fourth quarter NAV which was largely due to the $0.16 per share, special dividend and net realized and unrealized losses in the quarter. On the topic of dividends, as you'll recall from the last quarter, the Board of GSBD enacted a revised dividend structure consisting of a base dividend of $0.32 per share with upside via supplemental variable distributions of at least 50% of net investment income in excess of of the amount of base dividend, an incentive fee reduction from 20% to 17.5% over a 7% hurdle in the interest of aligning the long-term earnings power of the portfolio to increase shareholder value. And over the subsequent three quarters, including the quarter ended March 31, 2025, the Board authorized a special dividend of $0.16 per share. The Board declared a first quarter 2025 supplemental dividend of $0.05 per share payable on or about June 13, 2025 to shareholders of record as of May 30, 2025. Adjusted for the impact of the supplemental dividend related to the first quarter's earnings, the company's first quarter adjusted NAV per share is $13.15, which to note is a non-GAAP financial measure introduced as a result of the dividend policy change. The Board also declared a base dividend per share of $0.32 and a special dividend of $0.16 per share to shareholders of record as of June 30, 2025. As anticipated, we made these distributions while remaining below our targeted debt to equity leverage ratio of one and a quarter times. We ended the quarter with a net debt to equity ratio of 1.16 times as of March 31, 2025 as compared to 1.17 times as of December 31, 2024. We remain focused on delivering on our new dividend structure, the core earnings power of the portfolio, and realizing exits of legacy portfolio companies while rotating into new vintage credits. With that, let me turn it over to my co CEO David Miller.