Thank you, John. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our fourth quarter and fiscal year-end 2025 earnings conference call. I am here today with David Miller, our Co-Chief Executive Officer; Tucker Greene, our President and Chief Operating Officer; and Stan Matuszewski, our Chief Financial Officer. I would like to start by highlighting GSBD's progress since our integration, followed by an overview of our platform's activity during 2025. I'll then spend some time sharing our perspective on current market conditions amidst most recent headlines in the software space. I'll then turn the call over to David and Tucker, who will dive into our fourth quarter results portfolio activity and performance before handing it off to Stan to take us through our financial results. And finally, we'll open the line for Q&A. Since GSBD's integration into the broader direct lending platform in 2022, we've enhanced our sourcing, underwriting and portfolio management oversight. This quarter, the proportion of our portfolio benefiting from the 2022 reorganization has grown to 57%, while 43% still reflects deals made prior to the integration, which we call the legacy portfolio. From this integration, GSBD has directly benefited through a deeper origination funnel and the ability to invest in and frequently lead larger senior secured debt transactions supported by the platform's disciplined approach. We have approximately 250 investment professionals on our broader private credit platform. The scale of our investing team, the scale of our platform and the incumbency, relationships and investment prowess. Our team has built up over nearly 30 years, stacks up well against industry peers. What makes it more powerful and unique is having a private credit business attached to the #1 global investment bank. In addition to the deal origination through our dedicated private credit team, we are able to draw on the relationships of more than 3,000 investment bankers, helping us identify potentially attractive opportunities from our #1 M&A franchise which we can select from as a fiduciary to investors subject to regulatory requirements. Before I dive into our view on the market, I'd like to highlight some broader stats that illustrate the progress GSBD has made as we continue to transition to the direct lending platform. The median EBITDA of the portfolio has increased 84% from year-end 2021 to $71.8 million at year-end 2025. Our exposure to first lien investments increased to 97% of the portfolio from 89% during that same period. Throughout 2025, GSBD demonstrated continued progress in addressing credit quality concerns and active management of the portfolio. PIK as a percentage of total investment income was 9% in Q4 2025, which is down from 15.3% in Q4 2024. Of that 9% during the fourth quarter, 5% of total investment income during the quarter was from PIK that was introduced as a loan modification or amendment after the initial agreement the vast majority of which relates to the legacy portfolio. Our investments on nonaccrual decreased slightly to 1.9% of fair value from 2% during the year. This is well below our highest nonaccrual rate since integration of 3.4% of fair value. Another topical consideration we've been keen to address is our exposure to annualized recurring revenue or ARR loans within our broader BDC complex, which includes GSBD. From its peak of 36.5% during Q3 2022, we have significantly reduced the ARR exposure within the BDC complex to approximately 5% at year-end 2025. Within GSBD specifically, ARR loans came down from nearly 39% of the portfolio on a fair value basis to 11% during that same time period. This trend is attributed to our strategic focus on EBITDA-based investments since integration and our proactive approach in mitigating ARR loans from the legacy portfolio as we seek strategic exits or EBITDA conversions for the existing loans in the space. Overall, our direct lending platform had another strong year in 2025, which directly benefited GSBD. For the year in the Americas specifically, we committed a total of approximately $14.6 billion, which was larger than the $13 billion committed during 2024 and more than double the activity in 2023, all the while remaining selective and disciplined in our underwriting approach. From a macro perspective, despite a volatile first half of 2025, total M&A volume globally throughout the year was up 44% from 2024. U.S. private equity deals reached nearly $1.2 trillion, marking the second time in history that deal volume has surpassed $1 trillion. Despite this being driven largely by mega deals exceeding $1 billion, we expect this M&A momentum in a potentially falling rate environment to continue and spur a resumption of private equity activity. A more favorable M&A environment should stimulate greater demand for credit financing. And despite the supply of credit remaining robust, we do anticipate spreads to moderately widen during the market dynamics we've seen over the past month. We believe that in today's market environment, differentiation among managers will increasingly be driven by sourcing quality, underwriting discipline, collateral oversight and creditor protections. Let's get to the topic of software. We have a very experienced software investing team. Our view informed by extensive collaboration across Goldman Sachs, including our 13,000 software engineers, our technology investment banking team and our growth equity investors who are early to companies like Anthropic is that AI's impact will be highly company-specific and nuanced. We will come back to the topic of software and go through some more detail on our framework and a case study but our broader private credit platform has operated with an incredibly high bar focusing on what we believe are high-quality situations in our very broad funnel. As it relates to the recent headlines in software, and the volatility we've seen in equity markets, we understand the concerns regarding AI's potential impact on certain software business models. However, as credit investors positioned at the top of the capital structure, our lens is fundamentally different from, say, equity investors. We don't participate in growth or equity valuation upside. We're focused on the durability of assets and their cash flows. This credit-focused perspective provides some insulation from valuation volatility. That said, we recognize that sufficiently severe disruption could impact creditworthiness, which is why we maintain ongoing vigilance and are prepared to adapt if our thesis on any portfolio company changes materially. We are focused on lending to scaled incumbent businesses that are deeply entrenched in mission-critical workflows and complex use cases, evidenced by strong retention and efficient growth. These structural features, among other things, are key characteristics that we seek in software companies that demonstrate real incumbency advantages. Our direct lending platform has a long history of investing in the software sector with investments in the sector dating back to 2008 when we launched our first senior direct lending fund. We have been proactively assessing the impacts of AI on the software space for years. We passed on our first deal due to AI concerns in October of 2023 and rolled out an internal framework to evaluate AI disruption risk in early 2025, which is incorporated into all new investments in addition to our ongoing monitoring of existing portfolio exposure. The characteristics of our framework include, but are not limited to, acting as mission-critical systems of record with proprietary data and deep domain expertise solving for complex use cases and deterministic outcomes with no tolerance for errors, leveraging the accumulation of context, deep understanding of customers' unique requirements to drive critical business processes, providing broad platforms versus single-product tools, operating on modern underlying architecture with limited technical debt, actively innovating and embedding AI into their own products, operating in regulated and risk-averse industries with long-term customer relationships and trust as well as having proven track records of managing security, compliance, regulatory and governance complexities. We look at each opportunity through this lens in the underwriting process. Across our broader Direct Lending Americas platform, we have closed or committed to '26 new software deals since January 2025 that exhibit strong KPIs including an average Rule of 40 of 55.8%, comprised of 16.6% recurring revenue growth and 39.1% cash EBITDA margins. During the third quarter 2025, revenue growth and EBITDA margins of our Direct Lending Americas software portfolio improved to 9.2% and 34.9%, respectively, up from 7.8% and 30.3% a year earlier, respectively. Let me provide a concrete example of how we leverage the Goldman Sachs ecosystem for both proprietary origination and enhanced diligence by discussing our largest committed software deal during the quarter, Clearwater Analytics. Clearwater Analytics, founded in 2004 and based in Boise, Idaho, provides cloud native investment accounting, analytics and reporting solutions for institutional investors, including insurance companies. Goldman Sachs has been around this company for a very long time. We were approached by the sponsors looking to take Clearwater Private as the only organization that we believe could have provided a 100% solution on a transaction of this size in both public and private markets in addition to offering M&A advice. We showed the sponsors indicative financing terms across both markets and ultimately, the sponsor selected the private credit alternative where we were able to structure and negotiate a mutually beneficial bilateral credit facility that included our desired long-term size allocation. The bilateral process, both simplified and streamlined the sponsor's financing process while protecting the confidentiality of the M&A process which was critically important for the M&A execution. This is an example of leveraging the broader GS ecosystem to deliver differentiated origination and outcomes for our investors. The other part of the ecosystem relates to diligence in our AI framework. The deal team benefited from a firsthand perspective on Clearwater's capabilities and value proposition with Goldman Sachs being a customer of Clearwater's across our Asset and Wealth Management and Global Banking and Markets divisions. The deal team was able to conduct multiple calls with our engineering colleagues to validate our credit thesis and build a high degree of conviction related to the mission criticality and stickiness of the solution and competitive positioning and durability in a rapidly evolving technology landscape. And so in December 2025, the GS Private Credit Complex committed to 100% of a $3.5 billion investment in a new unitranche financing to support the take private of Clearwater by Warburg Pincus and Permira. And a few weeks later, the sponsors brought 9 other lenders into the deal. The Goldman Sachs private credit complex retained our desired $1.235 billion of the facility, and the GS BDC will own $75 million of that at closing. The Clearwater investment highlights key characteristics that underscore our approach to investing in software amidst an evolving and nuanced investing environment. Clearwater's advantages are not about the cost to write code. They're about owning the customer relationship, leveraging proprietary data with network effects, navigating regulatory complexity, and providing the insurance policy that mission-critical systems will work reliably. These structural and strategic advantages enable Clearwater to continue providing value to its customers and benefit from AI advancements rather than be disrupted by them. Looking forward, our framework will continue to evolve as the landscape develops. While AI remains a dynamic and rapidly evolving area, we remain confident in our ability to thoughtfully assess and help mitigate AI-related risks across both our current portfolio and new investment opportunities. That said, and this is important, this is not a time for complacency, but rather a time to remain humble, proactive, disciplined and forward-looking. We are focused on the implications of AI, not only within software, but across the broader business landscape, and we continue to leverage the differentiated capabilities of the Goldman Sachs ecosystem in support of our portfolio. With that, let me turn it over to my co-CEO, David.