Thanks, Steve. And as usual, I will start with the cautionary statement that we will make certain statements that may be considered to be forward-looking statements under Federal Securities Law. The company’s actual future results may differ significantly from the matters discussed in these forward-looking statements, and we may not release revisions to these forward-looking statements to reflect changes after the statements were made. Factors and risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations are disclosed from time to time in greater detail in the company’s filings with the SEC and in this morning’s press release. Okay. With that, headlines from this morning’s press release report quarterly core FFO results of $0.81 per share for the third quarter of 2023. That is up $0.02 or 2.5% over year ago results of $0.79 per share. First nine-months 2023 results were $2.42 per share, which represents an increase of 3% over prior year results. AFFO for the first nine-months was $2.44 per share, and that represents a 1.2% increase over 2022 results. As we have disclosed since 2020, the last page of our press release provides details of the pandemic deferred rent repayments. As tenants fulfill their deferred rent obligations the repayment amounts, as you can see, are slowing from 14.5 million in 2022 to 3.1 million in 2023 and then at the bottom of that Page 13, we have provided pro forma per share amounts, excluding these repayments in both 2022 and 2023 to provide a look at the recurring fundamental per share performance. These adjusted results show nine-month per share growth of 3.9% for core FFO, and that is instead of a 3.0% headline number and also shows 3.4% growth for AFFO, and that is instead of the 1.2% headline number. So 90 basis points higher for core, 220 basis points higher for AFFO versus the headline numbers. We think this just gives you a better picture of the core fundamental operating results of our business. But overall, a good quarter, in line with our expectations. Moving on, our AFFO dividend payout ratio for the first nine-months of 2023 was approximately 68%. And which resulted in approximately $141 million of free cash flow for the first nine-months after the payment of all expenses and dividends. And this equates to a $188 million annualized free cash flow rate. Occupancy was 99.2% at quarter end. That is down 20 basis points from prior quarter and year-end 2022. G&A expense was $10.2 million for the quarter, representing 5.0% of revenues and 5.4% for the first nine-months of 2023. But our midpoint guidance for this line item remains at $44 million for the full-year of 2023, which would put our - put it close to 5.3% of revenues for the year. We ended the quarter with $800.2 million of annual base rent in place for all leases as of September 30, 2023. As Steve mentioned, today, we increased our 2023 core FFO guidance, increasing the bottom end by $0.02 and the top end by $0.01 to a range of $3.19 to $3.23 per share. AFFO guidance was increased by the same amount to a range of $3.22 to $3.26 per share. This new guidance suggests 2% to 2.5% growth in core FFO for 2023 versus 2022 on the headline number. But again, if the deferred rent repayments are eliminated from both years, then core FFO growth would be in the 3% to 3.5% range. Similarly, AFFO per share would go from around 1% growth at the midpoint for 2023 to around 3% growth if we exclude the deferred rent repayments. As we have previously discussed, the more modest growth in per share results for 2023 reflects in part the high bar created by last year’s 9.8% growth, the lack of tailwinds that were helpful in 2022 as well as the slowdown in the scheduled deferred rent repayments as noted on Page 13. The 2023 guidance and the key supporting assumptions are on Page 7 of today’s press release with the only notable change, as Steve mentioned, the $100 million increase in our 2023 acquisition volume guidance now a range of $700 million to $800 million. Switching over to the balance sheet. We maintain a good leverage and liquidity profile with $1.2 billion of liquidity at quarter end. We funded approximately half of our year-to-date $550 million of acquisitions with free cash flow, disposition proceeds and a little bit of equity issued very early this year. In mid-August, we opted to issue $500 million of 10-year unsecured debt with a 5.6% coupon and a 5.9% yield, while we really had no pressing need to issue debt, we just wanted to stay in front of the curve in what appears to be a growing supply of debt issuance from a variety of sources. But as I have said, we will know in a couple of years the wisdom of issuing that debt. So far, it feels like a reasonable call, and there is also very real value in maintaining our low balance sheet risk. Our weighted average debt maturity remains over 12-years, which will help us slow the coming refinance headwind that all REITs are facing. All of our debt outstanding is unsecured at fixed rates. A couple of numbers, net book to gross book assets was 40.9%. Net debt-to-EBITDA was 5.4 times at September 30. Interest coverage and fixed charge coverage was 4.6 times for the third quarter. We are happy to see more attention and discussion in the marketplace about capital allocation. Those of you who know us well, have heard us hanging that from the last few years. We believe it is one of the more fundamental issues for any REIT or frankly, any company valuing equity adequately, whether that equity is produced by free cash flow, disposition proceeds or new equity issuance is at the heart of growing per share results in our opinion. A low view of the return requirements for deploying equity and debt capital likely leads to suboptimal accretion when deploying that capital. Not valuing equity capital rate also frequently leads to asset growth over time that is in our minds, not sufficiently accretive to per share results. So we are glad the topic is getting more attention. Unfortunately, only now that the capital markets are rock here and the citing contrast of recent years is producing some indigestion in every corner of the investment world. Over the last few months, we have been talking with investors about what the world might look like in a no new equity environment, which is why we are glad that our free cash flow from operations relative to our typical acquisition volumes will help us better navigate that rocky capital market environment. We will likely give more details in this regard on next quarter’s call in connection with our 2024 guidance. So in closing, I think we are in relatively good positioned to navigate the elevated economic and capital market uncertainties and to continue to grow per share results, which we view as the primary measure of success. And we are mindful this is a long-term multiyear endeavor. The fundamentals of our business remain in good shape, occupancy, re-leasing, renewals, acquisition and disposition volumes and cap rates. So feel good about where we are at the moment. With that, we will open it up to any questions.