Thank you, David. Our BDC complex is core to our strategy and the growth and positioning of GSBD, in particular, is a focus for myself and the management team. The Goldman Sachs global private credit platform is uniquely positioned at the intersection of asset management and one of the world's top investment banking and global markets franchises, creating an unparalleled sourcing engine of investment opportunities across the credit spectrum. With that, let's pivot to a recap of what we saw in the market in Q2 and what is guiding the performance of GSBD. After my comments, I will then turn the call over to David Miller and Tucker Greene to describe our portfolio activity and performance in more detail before handing it over to Stan Matuszewski to take us through our financial results. And then finally, we'll open the line for Q&A. Despite the policy volatility that has defined 2025, exacerbated by the noise of Liberation Day, the M&A market has remained resilient. Total M&A dollar volumes in the first half of the year were up 29% year-over-year as companies adapted to a change is constant mentality. We believe that uncertainty will persist, particularly in the tariff-sensitive industries that many companies are seizing the opportunity to reevaluate their portfolio and strategic ambitions with a fresh perspective. A persistent lack of DPI or distributions to paid in capital a continued buildup of dry powder and rapidly accelerating innovation have driven sponsors to act, especially in sectors less sensitive to tariffs such as software, domestic services, financial services and digital infrastructure, which are the stalwarts of our platform and strategy that have been in place for over 29 years. Despite the hesitation in public markets following tariff announcements in April, equity markets hovered near all-time highs at the end of Q2, boosted by a series of successful IPOs. The public and private markets are necessary enablers of each other and will continue to fuel the M&A market in tandem, which again is a key part of our approach wherein we see bringing a fulsome term sheet, whether it be private, public or a combination of both, a leading indicator of our right to win. The interplay between the broadly syndicated loan market and direct lenders remains strong. Roughly $16 billion in direct loans have been refinanced via BSLs, while $11.7 billion of BSLs have been refinanced by direct loans as of the end of the second quarter. Our banking colleagues believe we are in the second year of a 5- to 7-year M&A market recovery, but the backlog has continued to build leading into year-end despite a shifting macro backdrop with a 10-year moving in and a lower cost of capital. From a weighted average spreads perspective, we saw a modest tightening across the platform's new deals. Now turning to our second quarter results. Our net investment income per share for the quarter was $0.38 and net asset value per share was $13.02 as of quarter end, a decrease of 1.4% relative to the first quarter NAV, which was largely due to the $0.16 per share special dividend. Taking a closer look at the NAV bridge for the quarter, if you were to exclude the supplemental and special dividend paid in Q2, our book NAV per share increased quarter-over-quarter. The Board declared a second quarter 2025 supplemental dividend of $0.03 per share payable on or about September 15, 2025 to shareholders of record as of August 29, 2025. Adjusted for the impact of the supplemental dividend related to the second quarter's earnings, the company's second quarter adjusted NAV per share is $12.99, which I would note is a non-GAAP financial measure introduced as a result of the dividend policy change. The Board also declared a third quarter base dividend per share of $0.32 and a special dividend of $0.16 per share to shareholders of record as of September 30, 2025. We ended the quarter with a net debt-to-equity ratio of 1.12x as of June 30, 2025 as compared to 1.16x as of March 31, 2025. We remain focused on delivering on our new dividend structure through the core earnings power of the portfolio and realizing exit of legacy portfolio companies while rotating into new vintage credits. With that, let me turn it over to our COO and President, Tucker, to discuss portfolio fundamentals.