Thanks, Tim. My comments today will focus on the recent capital allocation and then, our financial position and liquidity and our unaudited fourth quarter results. Again, you may wish to refer to the investor highlight Slides posted this morning on our website. At March 31, 2023, we reported $148 million of free cash. As of yesterday, May 23rd, our free cash balance stood at a virtually identical level of $148.6 million, which is net of the $40.4 million dividend that was paid on Monday. In addition, I'd note that on top of our free cash, we also have $11.4 million in available for sale securities. A highlight of the quarter was of course the delivery of the Captain Markos, our dual fuel 84,000 CBM VLGC delivered to us on March 31 at the Shikoku shipyard in Japan. She was financed under Japanese Financing arrangement that we agreed in 2021. The tenure of that agreement is 13 years and we amortize $210,000 per month until year five and thereafter, $250,000 per month until maturity. The interest rate is 2.59%, including the credit adjustment spread plus one month term SOFR. Additionally, during the quarter, we voluntarily prepaid $15 million of debt under the Cresques Japanese Financing arrangement. With a debt balance at quarter end of $663.6 million, our total debt to total book capitalization stood at 43.2%, and net debt to net total capitalization at 33.5%. Our leverage ratios were up marginally from last quarter due to the delivery of the Captain Markos, which added $56 million in debt on March 31. We have no refinancings until 2026, ample free cash, an undrawn revolver, and one debt-free vessel. Thus we have a significant measure of financial flexibility. We currently expect our cash cost per day that's OpEx, G&A, time charter-in cost, print interest, and principal for the coming year to be approximately $24,000 to $25,000 per day. Now, I'd like to turn to our chartering results and again would remind you to look at the Slides posted this morning on our website. For the quarter, we achieved total utilization of 95.7% for the quarter, with a daily TCE that's time charter equivalent revenue over operating days as we define those terms in our filings of $68,135 yielding utilization adjusted TCE or TCE revenue per available day of about $65,187. Spot TCE per available day, which reflects our portion of the Helios -- net profits of the Helios Pool for the quarter was about $68,019. Also, overall, the Helios Pool reported a spot TCE including COAs of approximately $78,530 per available day for the quarter. We note that we had previously indicated that a two-month lagged average is a good proxy for our chartering results. That guidance did not hold this quarter because of the volatility that Tim referenced, including a significant drop in rates from the end of September -- sorry at the end of December to the beginning of January. Daily OpEx for the quarter was $10,304 excluding drydocking-related OpEx. It was $10,528 per day including those amounts. Our OpEx increased somewhat sequentially -- sequentially as we experienced moderately higher cost per day for spares and stores, repairs and maintenance and other miscellaneous expenses. Our time charter-in expense for the four time charter-in vessels increased to $7.2 million, reflecting the partial quarter of the HLS Citrine and the HLS Diamond. For the quarter that ends on June 30th, we expect total TCE-in expense of approximately $10.5 million, which will reflect full quarter contributions from the Citrine and Diamond. We expect the crystal ball, the fourth dual fuel VLGC to join our fleet to deliver during the quarter ending September 2023, and thus for our TCE-in cost to increase to $12.9 million for that quarter. On a fully delivered basis, we estimate total quarterly TCE-in expense to be $13.2 million to $13.3 million. All these numbers are provided for your reference in the investor highlight Slides posted this morning. Our total G&A for the quarter was $7.5 million and cash G&A which is G&A excluding non-cash compensation expense, was about $6.7 million. Since we incurred about $0.5 million in predelivery G&A expense, if we exclude that amount, our cash G&A was about $6.2 million. Since our G&A normally skews higher in the fourth fiscal quarter or the first calendar quarter because of certain statutory accruals that we must make, we were pleased with our G&A control this quarter. Our reported adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $102.1 million, which is the highest quarterly EBITDA in our corporate history. To put that amount in context, our total EBITDA for fiscal 2022 was $161.1 million. Interestingly, the March 2023 quarter also represented the highest ever level of U.S. Gulf loadings, 267 liftings to be precise, underscoring the significance of U.S. exports to the global LPG trade. Turning to interest expense. Our cash interest expense, which we define as the sum of the line items' interest expense, excluding deferred financing fees and other loan expenses plus realized gain loss on interest rate swap derivatives, resulted in a cash interest expense for the quarter of $7.1 million. With the addition of the Captain Markos and the reduced debt on the Cresques, we estimate that our total quarterly interest expense for the current quarter, that is the one ending June 30th, will be about $8.1 million, reflecting a full quarter of the Markos, and the higher SOFR rates on our floating rate debt. Nonetheless, we continue to benefit from our hedging policy and the favorable pricing of our Japanese Financing, leaving us with a current interest cost on a weighted average basis of 4.1%. Although we currently hold a roughly 8.6% -- sorry, 86% economic interest in Helios, we do not consolidate its P&L or balance sheet accounts, which has the effect of understating our cash and working capital. Thus we believe its useful to provide some additional insight in order to give a more complete picture. As of Tuesday, May 23rd, the pool had roughly $8.7 million of cash on hand. Turning to capital allocation. With the payment of another $1 of regular dividend, we have now paid dividends in seven of the last eight quarters, totaling $8.50 per share or $343.3 million. When coupled with our $113 million self-tender offer and $115.5 million of open market repurchases, we've now returned over $570 million to our shareholders since our IPO. The significant dividend payments in the last year underscore our Board's commitment to a sensible capital allocation policy to balance it's market outlook, operating and capital needs of the business, and appropriate level of risk tolerance given the volatility in shipping. We remain cautiously optimistic about our cash flow generation over the coming months. But we'd be vigilant for changes in the global macroeconomic and energy market outlook. With that, I'll pass the call over to John Hadjipateras.