Thank you, Matt. Good morning, everyone. I'll focus today on our efforts on the liquidity and capital front. But first, let me provide an update around our CECL reserve and watch list loans. This quarter, we recorded a $60 million increase in our CECL reserve for a total reserve of $172 million or 224 basis points of our loan principal balance. Slightly more than half our total CECL reserve remains held against the two 5-rated office loans. We have a total of 7 loans on the watch list as of quarter end. As we detailed previously, we executed a modification of a Philadelphia office loan earlier this year and subsequently removed it from the watch list this quarter as anticipated. During the quarter, we downgraded two office loans to a risk rating of 4. And consistent with past quarters, we highlight those loans in our earnings supplemental. Touching on our two 5-rated office loans in Minneapolis and Philadelphia, the respective sponsors have commenced sales processes for the properties, and we increased our reserves this quarter to reflect further weakness in the office sector. As Matt mentioned, we will evaluate the prices and determine the appropriate path forward with the option to sell or own and manage the properties ourselves. In either case, we anticipate some resolution in the coming months on both assets. The two new watch list loans are secured by properties in two of the more challenged office markets, Washington D.C. and Chicago. That said, both properties have experienced positive leasing momentum recently. The DC loan, which is the larger of the 2, is backed by a well-located Class A office near Dupont Circle and following two recent leases is 84% leased. The Chicago property is also a Class A asset and is located in the central loop submarket. Following some known vacates, along with 83,000 square feet of recent leasing, the property is currently 70% leased. Of the 14 office loans, eight loans in our portfolio, equating to half of the outstanding principal balance are risk rated 3. This segment of our office loan portfolio is 89% Class A and 91% leased with a weighted average debt yield of 8.3% and a median 8.8 years of weighted average lease term remaining. The average risk rating of the company's broader portfolio was 3.2, consistent with year-end. 87% of our portfolio is risk rated 3, and we collected 100% of scheduled interest payments across the entire portfolio in 1Q and through the April payment date. An important differentiator for KREF, particularly in times of capital markets volatility is how we finance our senior loan portfolio. At quarter end, our diversified financing sources totaled $9 billion, with $2.7 billion of undrawn capacity. 76% or outstanding financing is fully non-mark-to-market and the remaining balance is marked to credit only. KREF is differentiated in the diversity and resiliency of these sources, which includes not only two managed CRE CLOs but also multiple bespoke financing facilities supported by a number of financing partners. We are not reliant on a single type of financing with no outsized exposure across any of these categories. Additionally, in the first quarter, we extended a $600 million repurchase facility by two years to December 2025 and a $500 million warehouse facility to March 2026. In a challenging macro and banking environment, we were able to extend an aggregate $1.1 billion in financing by roughly 2.5 years between the two facilities. KREF is well capitalized with a debt-to-equity ratio of 2.2x and a total look-through leverage ratio of 4x as of quarter end. As of March 31st, we had $254 million of cash and $610 million of undrawn corporate revolver capacity. In addition to this, we had $100 million of unencumbered and unpledged senior loans, plus underdrawn capacity on our credit facilities, bringing our total liquidity position to nearly $1 billion. As noted, we have cash on the balance sheet plus ample capacity on the revolver to retire our May 2023 convertible notes maturing next month. Following the convertible note maturity and excluding match term secured financing, KREF has no debt maturities for nearly 2.5 years. Thank you for joining us today. Now we're happy to take your questions.