Thank you, John. We will begin the call with our perspective on recent performance in light of a gradually improving macro environment. Next, we will discuss our investing activity and outline GSBD's positioning heading into the fourth quarter. Shortly after, David Miller and Tucker Greene will provide a detailed review of portfolio activity and performance before handing it over to Stan Matuszewski to take us through the financial results. We will conclude by opening the line for Q&A. The M&A market has continued to remain resilient despite uncertainty that persisted in the first half of the year as total M&A dollar volumes in Q3 2025 were 40.9% higher year-over-year compared to Q3 2024. This surge is attributed mainly to a renewed risk-on sentiment among investors, lower borrowing costs, greater market clarity and a reset on valuation expectations between buyers and sellers in the market. As David will discuss later in the call, this pickup in activity has directly benefited GSBD as our new investment commitments and repayments during the quarter reached the highest level since the integration of the platform in 2022. Recent base rate cuts with additional expected through year-end into 2026 should accelerate deal activity, albeit spreads remain tight across the middle market and large cap juxtaposed against a tight spread environment in the public markets. Our proactive decision earlier this year to adjust our dividend policy and cut the base dividend positions us well in what will be a lower yield environment, where emphasis on credit selection will be paramount. Additionally, during times of increased competition for deal flow and high-quality deals, our proximity to our investment banking franchise serves as a competitive advantage for our platform to remain highly selective in evaluating opportunities. Broader credit dynamics remain top of mind for investors and made recent headlines concerning what we believe to be idiosyncratic issues versus a broader systematic concern. We remain comfortable with the risk dynamics in the private credit space given the overall health of portfolio fundamentals. We continue to evaluate the impacts of tariffs, ability for companies to service debt, and risks involved with software investing, particularly with the recent growth of AI investing. We recognize the transformative potential of AI, but our primary focus remains on downside risk mitigation. We have developed a proprietary framework to assess both software and AI disruption risk that we had implemented in our underwriting for over 2 years. We remain focused on mission-critical, market-leading companies with core systems of record across all our software deals. Now turning to our third quarter results. Our net income -- our net investment income per share for the quarter was $0.40 and net asset value per share was $12.75 as of quarter end, a decrease of 2.1% relative to the second quarter NAV, which was partially due to the $0.16 per share special dividend with some markdowns to previously underperforming names. This quarter marks the last of 3 special dividends that were announced earlier this year, along with changes to our dividend policy. The Board declared a third quarter 2025 supplemental dividend of $0.04 per share payable on or about December 15, 2025, to shareholders of record as of November 28, 2025. Adjusted for the impact of the supplemental dividend related to the third quarter's earnings, the company's third quarter adjusted NAV per share is $12.71 which I would note is a non-GAAP financial measure introduced as a result of the dividend policy change. The Board also declared a fourth quarter base dividend per share of $0.32 to shareholders of record as of December 31, 2025. We ended the quarter with a net debt-to-equity ratio of 1.17x as of September 30, 2025, as compared to 1.12x as of June 30, 2025. With that, let me turn it over to my co-CEO, David.