Thank you, Kevin. On our last quarterly update call, we expressed our belief that we would exceed our $2 billion full year monetization target. And as Ed just pointed out, we have now executed more than $2.5 billion in year-to-date transactions. Very importantly, virtually all of these, a total of roughly 50 hospital facilities in five major transactions have been executed at very attractive valuations, whether that's based on capitalization rate, IRRs to us, real estate replacement cost, our initial investment and almost any other valuation metric, particularly in light of the diminished values that other real estate categories have suffered during the same period. These transactions have provided liquidity that we have used to pay down $1.5 billion of debt in the second quarter, enabling us to fully pay all 2024 maturities and address all of our 2025 scheduled maturities. As a result of our success executing this liquidity strategy, we received overwhelming support from our bank lenders to adjust our revolving credit agreement to provide a long runway in covenant cushion as Steward continues to pursue the sale and re-tenanting of its hospital operations. There is long-term value in the majority of our hospital real estate currently leased to Steward, and we expect to retain that value as we replace Steward with new tenants or sell assets to quality operators through the court supervised restructuring process. We appreciate our lenders' recognition that we do not control the timing of this process, and the additional flexibility afforded by this covenant cushion during the restructuring process. We filed an 8-K this morning that describes key provisions of the amendment, so I will only briefly summarize a few points. First, on last quarter's call, we discussed the temporary waiver of the loan provision that limited the value of certain assets leased to tenants in bankruptcy to 10% of total unencumbered assets. At that time, the waiver was effective through the end of this current quarter -- third quarter. This limitation has now been weighed for 14 months through September 30, 2025. This generally means that our real estate lease to Steward will remain in that calculation until then. And our expectation is that virtually all assets leased to Steward will have been sold or transitioned to other operators within that period. And although there are no assurances, we certainly expect that will happen sooner rather than later in the period. Second, given our current priorities and the liquidity generated from asset sales and financing transactions already executed and available in the future, we further reduced our revolving credit commitment to $1.28 billion, we just do not need the multibillion-dollar facility that was available to us during the years of rapid and significant growth. Third, the amendments also provide headroom all the way through next September of 2025 for certain financial covenants. These modifications will preclude the need to continually evaluate and adjust for the effects of the Steward transitions, including sale prices, lease terms, any rent deferrals, et cetera. Again, these are described in this morning's 8-K. I will highlight that the consolidated net worth covenant has been permanently adjusted to $5 billion and that can be compared to the $6.2 billion of GAAP net worth we reported as of the end of the second quarter. Other changes that are effective through September 30, 2025, are to increase the allowed total leverage to 65%, increase allowed unsecured leverage to 70% and reduce the required unsecured interest coverage to 1.45x. We believe that each of these covenants gives us cushion that anticipates the Steward re-tenanting selling outcomes. And as of June 30, which is the effective date of the amendments, we are well within each of them. Finally, we agreed also that unless we elect to terminate the amendment provisions ahead of next September 30, we will limit to $0.08 per share per quarter, the amount of cash included in our quarterly dividend payments. Based on this morning's reported quarterly results and recent market share prices, this would represent a normalized FFO payout ratio of about 35% and a dividend yield of about 7%. If our re-taxable income requires a payout in excess of the $0.08 per quarter, our Board will determine which additional dividend alternatives are most appropriate at the time. These amendments, again, are generally effective through the end of the third quarter of 2025. That is certainly not a prediction that it will take more than a year to transition our Steward leased assets but is an indication of the assessed strength of our business, especially that of the non-Steward portion of our assets. For our fixed income investors and shareholders, the key takeaway from this amendment should be that we have repeatedly proven, especially to our lenders. Over the last couple of years that our hospital real estate portfolio is strong and liquid and readily available to strategically monetize in the event we elect to do so, and looking through calendar 2025 into 2026, our expectation is that we will have a stable portfolio of hospital real estate leased to key operators in their respective markets with no exposure to Steward. We expect to have multiple options to satisfy maturing loans, including refinancing, additional monetization of high-value real estate and other strategies. And with that, I will turn it back over to the operator for questions.