Thank you, Helen. Let me review the businesses beginning with PJT Park Hill. As we telegraphed on our last earnings call, PJT Park Hill revenues declined nearly $40 million from year ago levels, given limited fund closings and difficult comparisons. The fundraising environment for alternative investments continues to be challenging. Despite the recent recovery and public market valuations, the denominator effect still weighs on alternative asset allocations. This over allocation has been magnified by the sharp reduction in capital returns to LPs given the relative dearth of monetizations via M&A, IPOs and leverage recapitalizations. As a result, we are seeing smaller fundraisers and longer marketing periods. PJT Park Hill with its best-in-class distribution capabilities remains the go-to firm in fundraising. In this challenge fundraising environment, PJT Park Hill should be able to make up some of the first quarter deficit, but not all, keeping PJT Park Hill’s 2023 revenues below last year’s record revenue levels, even with continued progress in our secondary or private capital solutions business. In restructuring, our first quarter restructuring revenues were comparable to last year’s first quarter levels. We are benefiting from higher levels of restructuring activity, which we expect will remain elevated for some time. A difficult economic backdrop has pressured corporate fundamentals across the board. Not surprisingly, companies with levered balance sheets are finding higher financing costs and a more restrictive credit environment, particularly challenging. The stress is being felt more broadly across industries and regions and default rates continue to move higher. Consistent with last quarter’s commentary, restructuring revenues are expected to grow significantly for the remainder of 2023. Turning to strategic advisory. While the broader M&A environment continues to be quite difficult, revenues for our strategic advisory business were down only modestly in the quarter relative to year ago levels. The decline was significantly less than the decline in industry-wide completed volumes. We’re certainly not immune to a more challenged M&A backdrop characterized by more restrictive capital access, higher financing costs and more aggressive antitrust enforcement. Our progress, however, remains less tethered to the overall M&A environment and much of that progress is driven by the success of our recruiting efforts, the maturation of our teams and the growing recognition of our brand. Our mandate count, while down approximately 10% from year ago levels, has grown appreciably since the start of the year with a discernible uptick in April. While we are confident in progress client by client, given the fragile nature of the broader M&A market, we remain cautious on the performance of our strategic advisory business in 2023. Nevertheless, we are positioned to outperform on a relative basis given the investments we have made in this business. Longer-term, we remain confident in our strategic advisory growth prospects as we continue to leverage and integrate our enhanced capabilities, expand our client footprint and benefit from greater brand recognition. With respect to talent, given the current focus in the marketplace on recruitment, I’d like to reiterate our philosophy regarding investments in human capital. Over the past eight years, we have not wavered, we have consistently been focused on investing in and attracting the right talent at all levels, integrating this talent into our firm and infusing it with a culture of collaboration, maintaining discipline in our compensation practices, rewarding the right types of behavior and performance and remaining focused on the long-term. This philosophy has been key to our success. By staying true to this philosophy, we do right by our clients, we do right by our shareholders and we do right by our employees. With respect to the cadence of our hiring, many of the impediments we have previously spoken of are no longer obstacles. The current environment has presented us with an extraordinary opportunity to aggressively accelerate the pace of senior hiring, while remaining true to our core principles. The elevated level of hiring dialogues this year brings with it uncertainty regarding the precise magnitude of our hiring and notwithstanding the progress we are seeing in our client dialogues, the challenges in the broader M&A marketplace bring with it heightened uncertainty regarding our ability to translate that progress into 2023 financial results. Taken together, we expect to report an elevated compensation ratio this year. As Helen has indicated, we will provide our best estimate for our full year compensation to revenue ratio when we communicate second quarter results. By then, we will have a much better sense as to the magnitude of those elements. As we look ahead, we expect to navigate 2023 better than the macro backdrop would suggest. We expect any declines in our strategic advisory revenues to be more modest and declines in overall M&A activity, and that these declines will be more than offset by increases in our restructuring business. While these are difficult and challenging times, our firm is built to weather difficult and challenging times. We’ll continue to invest to strengthen our firm and we remain very confident in our prospects. And with that, we will now take your questions.