Thanks, Emma. Good morning and thanks for dialing in. You know, just I'm not going to give you the long Rithm update, but you know speaking about this company that we manage here at Rithm, the company is in great shape you know if you think about when we took it over in June of ‘24 the company had a lot of what I would call re-performing loans, very low coupon assets on the balance sheet. The team's done a great job by repositioning the company, selling down those assets and redeploying into current cash flow, higher yielding assets in the commercial space. One note is this company has no legacy commercial real estate exposure to the downside. So when you think about where we are today, the company has, give or take, about $300 million of equity. It's sitting on almost $100 million of cash. We did a capital raise in the quarter. So things are in very, very good shape. The growth story here is going to be one that is similar to what we did with Rithm, which was formerly known as New Residential, where we -- the company was seated with roughly $1 billion of capital and we grew it from $1 billion of permanent capital to roughly $8 billion today, and grew, you know, balance sheet earnings that company makes $1 billion a year. So this will take a little bit more time, obviously, because of where the equity trades, and I'll talk to that in a minute as I flip through the deck. But in general, I would say the company's in really good shape. We're excited about the ability to grow this company and put up real earnings for shareholders and see the equity price right itself to a more normalized valuation. So with that, I'm going to start on page three and I'll just flip through this quickly and then we'll have a little bit of Q&A. So when you think about the company it is managed by Rithm Capital and our teams here at Rithm Capital there's roughly 75 folks internally that focus on all of our what I would call our both Rithm Capital and Rithm Property Trust. That doesn't include, obviously, some of our affiliates, such as Sculptor and some of the different op-cos. The team here has a ton of experience, whether it be in the resi space or the commercial space. You know, my partner here, Charles Sorrentino, has been with me since 2008, running different trading desks on the sales side and has a ton of experience in the commercial real estate as do our other team members that are focused on this company. If you flip to page four, for the quarter GAAP income $1.1 million or $0.02 per diluted share, earnings available for distribution [$0.75] (ph) million or $0.02 per diluted share. The first quarter dividend we paid $0.06, that hopefully should continue. And then over time, hopefully that grows. Cash and cash equivalents, as I pointed out $97 million total equity, $295 million. And the GAAP book value today is $5.40. If you think about that on a relative basis, the stock trades in the current market at about $2.85. So we think the equity is extremely undervalued. We saw a pop after last quarter's earnings calls and then when the -- with the volatility we saw in the markets, obviously the equity price got hit pretty hard, but we feel very confident in one is where we stand in the business, but number two is the ability to create real shareholder value for folks that are along the equity. Page five, if you look for first quarter, we deployed $65 million in various CRE debt. That includes $47 million of AAA CMBS bonds with a roughly 11% type yield. We also did, we split a loan between Rithm Capital and Rithm Property Trusts, $35 million loan at SOFR plus $800 million on a midtown office building with a good sponsor. So that's, you know, when you think about that, that's 12% or 13% on levered return, not including fees. During the quarter, we did one of the first preps that got done in a long, long time. We raised $52 million of capital. You know, while I would say we're eager to grow earnings we want to be mindful of the volatility we're seeing in the markets. We're looking for great opportunities to deploy capital at what I would call teams type returns. And we're seeing plenty more things to do right now, but we're going to be patient. Here in the quarter, we sold $21 million of legacy resi assets, and we continue to grow earnings in the company. Page six is just a slide showing the potential earnings growth. I think you should assume for what we're trying to do here is looking for a strategic either a transaction or assets to acquire which are going to give us the ability to raise, to grow earnings and raise capital around. We continue to be on the hunt for that, but like I said with the volatility in the market we do think things are going to come our way, but we're going to be extremely patient here. Page seven, looking ahead at the opportunity with RPT. One is just look at the stock price, $2.85 versus a $5.40 book value, that should say enough. When you look at this page, why CRE debt, you've seen obviously the repricing of assets and dislocations. There was an article in the journal yesterday talking about the Chicago market, there's a 1.7 million square foot office building on the river there. Blackstone gave the keys back and you know they're just talking about the state of the so called office market in Chicago I’d encourage you to have a look at that, that article. When you look at our exposure in this business or at Rithm Property Trust, again there is no legacy commercial real estate exposure we fell really good about that and we have a very good team. What to expect as we go forward, we continue to see a pretty robust pipeline. We'll continue to focus on what I would say opportunistic investing and looking for the right time to deploy capital and drive higher earnings and higher growth. And then finally on page eight, just an illustration of what the future state of the portfolio could look like. You'll have some CMBS, you'll have senior loans, a little bit of mezz, and some opportunistic investments. We're not looking to go all in on any one strategy as it relates to the company. We're looking for some diversification across all these different asset classes. So with that I'll turn it back to the operator and we'll take some questions.