Thank you Jay and good morning everyone. Let's begin on slide 2. 2025 has been a challenging environment for new deals as the combination of interest rate volatility and market uncertainty has repriced capital and slowed decision making for our customers. This impacted Q1 investment activity as several transactions we expected to close during the quarter were delayed resulting in no new originations for the quarter. That said, our team remains highly engaged with both new and existing customers. The pace of signed LOIs has picked up and our pipeline is further along today than at the same point last year. We have non-binding LOIs totaling approximately 386 million for potential commitments across 11 ground leases and 4 loans. While certain of these transactions have closed in Q2, there could be no assurances that the rest of these transactions will close. Credit metrics are strong at current base rates. We're expecting contractual returns in the low 7% range before factoring in CPI and carat, which we believe is highly compelling. Six of the 11 ground leases under LOI are in the affordable housing space, continuing our momentum in that sector, which we expect to be a meaningful growth contributor moving forward. We're working with 11 unique sponsors, nine of which are new to our program, which not only demonstrates the reach of our product but bodes well for our future business as roughly 40% of our portfolio is repeat business. At quarter end, the total portfolio was $6.8 billion, UCA was estimated at $8.9 billion, GLTV was 52% and rent coverage was 3.5 times. We ended the quarter with approximately $1.3 billion of liquidity, which is further supported by the potential available capacity in our joint venture. Slide 3 provides a snapshot of our portfolio growth. In the first quarter we funded a total of $20 million which consisted of $16 million of ground lease fundings on pre-existing commitments that have a 6.7% economic yield and $4 million related to our share of the leasehold loan fund which earned interest at a rate of SOFR +386 basis points. Our ground lease portfolio has 147 assets and has grown 20 times by both book value and estimated unrealized capital appreciation since our IPO. We have 85 multifamily ground leases in the portfolio and have increased our exposure from 8% by count at IPO to 58% today. In total, the unrealized capital appreciation portfolio is comprised of approximately 36 million square feet of institutional quality commercial real estate consisting of approximately 20,000 multifamily units, 12.5 million square feet of office, over 5,000 hotel keys and 2 million square feet of life science and other property types. Continuing on Slide 4, let me detail our quarterly earnings results. For the first quarter, GAAP revenue was $97.7 million, net income was $29.4 million and earnings per share was $0.41. The decline in GAAP earnings year-over-year was primarily due to an increase in other expense driven by a non-recurring 1.9 million loss on a preferred equity investment and a Washington D.C. office leasehold interest. The leasehold was being marketed for sale with a portion of property taxes under appeal. We advanced funds to cover those taxes as we believed any unpaid amounts would have been an overhang on the sale process. The leasehold successfully changed hands recently and we have a new tenant in place with a strong track record and fresh equity committed to the building. Safehold will provide additional financing for building upgrades and leasing and in return will receive equity participation in the leasehold should it outperform. We believe this solution is a long-term positive for the asset. A portion of the taxes paid may be recovered in the future, but given our lack of visibility and confidence in the appeal process, we decided to write-off our preferred equity investment. Excluding this one time non-recurring loss, Q1 earnings per share increased slightly year-over-year driven by higher net earnings on investment fundings and percentage rent offset by an increase in our non-cash general provision primarily driven by higher GLTVs and lower earnings from equity method investments primarily due to repayments in the leasehold loan fund. On slide 5 we detail our portfolio's yields. For GAAP earnings, the portfolio currently earns a 3.7% cash yield and a 5.4% annualized yield. Annualized yield includes non-cash adjustments within rent depreciation amortization which is primarily from accounting methodology on IPO assets but excludes all future contractual variable rent such as fair market value resets, percentage rent or CPI based escalators which are all significant economic drivers. On an economic basis, the portfolio generates a 5.8% economic yield, which is an IRR based calculation that conforms with how we've underwritten these investments. This economic yield has additional upside including periodic CPI lookbacks, which we have in 83% of our ground leases. Using the Federal Reserve's current long-term breakeven inflation rate of 2.2%, the 5.8% economic yield increases to a 5.9% inflation adjusted yield. That 5.9% inflation adjusted yield then increases to 7.4% after layering in an estimate for unrealized capital appreciation using Safehold's 84% ownership interest in Caret at its most recent 2 billion valuation. We believe unrealized capital appreciation in our assets to be a significant source of value for the company that remains largely unrecognized by the market today. Turning to slide 6, we highlight the diversification of our portfolio by location and underlying property type. Our top 10 markets by gross book value are called out on the right representing approximately 66% of the portfolio. We include key metrics such as rent coverage and GLTV for each of these markets and we have additional detail at the bottom of the page by region and property type. Portfolio GLTV, which is based on annual asset appraisals from CBRE, increased quarter-over-quarter from 49% to 52%. This increase was not surprising as Q1 is our largest office revaluation quarter with approximately two thirds of the office portfolio getting reappraised. We target low attachment points in our ground leases to avoid being impacted by these temporary fluctuations. Although property appraisals declined, rent coverage on the portfolio was unchanged quarter-over-quarter at 3.5 times. We continue to believe that investing in well-located institutional quality ground leases in the top 30 markets that have attractive risk adjusted returns will benefit the company and its stakeholders over long periods of time. Lastly, on slide 7 we provide an overview of our capital structure. At year-end, we had approximately $4.7 billion of debt comprised of $2.2 billion of unsecured notes, $1.5 billion of non-recourse secured debt, $0.7 billion drawn on our unsecured revolver and $0.3 billion of our pro rata share of debt on ground leases which we own in joint ventures. Our weighted average debt maturity is approximately 19 years and we have no corporate maturities due until 2027. At quarter-end we had approximately $1.3 billion of cash and credit facility availability. We are rated A3 with stable outlook by Moody's, A- with stable Outlook by Fitch, and BBB+ with positive outlook by S&P. We have benefited from an active hedging strategy and remain well hedged on our limited floating rate borrowings. Of the $712 million revolver balance outstanding, $500 million is swapped to fixed SOFR at 3% through April 2028. We receive swap payments on a current cash basis each month and for the first quarter that produced cash interest savings of approximately $1.7 million that flowed through the P&L. We also have 250 million of long-term treasury locks at a weighted average rate of approximately 4.0% and current gain position of approximately $30 million. Of this $250 million, $100 million notional was unwound in April and crystallized out of $13 million cash gain and the remaining $150 million notional is active and outstanding with mark-to-market gain of approximately $17 million. These treasury locks are mark-to-market instruments currently recognized on the balance sheet, but not the P&L. They can be unwound for cash at any point through their designated term. However, only when they are applied to long-term debt would they then be recognized in our P&L overtime. We are levered 1.96 times on a total debt to equity basis which was flat versus last quarter. The effective interest rate on permanent debt is 4.2% and the portfolio's cash interest rate on permanent debt is 3.8%. So to conclude, despite a difficult market, the team is finding success sourcing new deals and expanding our customer base. We expect these efforts to translate into increasing investment activity in the near term and if markets remain choppy or there is a more significant downturn, we believe owning a diversified pool of ground leases is an attractive place to be. Growth has always been a driving force in our valuation, but at the current share price we think it's worth highlighting what investors own because the discount to what we believe is fair value has grown so large we have a balance sheet with no near term maturities, valuable in place hedges and significantly below market debt locked in for 19 years. At market discount rates, we believe there's approximately $10 or more of per share value in this debt on our balance sheet alone. On the asset side, we own a diverse pool of high-grade credit instruments, call protected and contractually compounding. We also typically own eight to nine free options on CPI in our leases, which will increase returns and protect value should inflation remain sticky, plus a free option on the future underlying real estate currently appraised at nearly 9 billion, which we believe over time will return many multiples of our invested basis. Part of the challenge in operating in a less traditional sector in the public market is there are no direct comps and investors typically have less experience with ground leases than they do other asset classes. At the current share price, we believe the portfolio is a mispriced asset. While scaling the business remains our top priority we are actively evaluating opportunities to take advantage of what we believe is a public versus private valuation disconnect on the existing portfolio and we look forward to keeping the market updated on our progress. And with that, let me turn it back to Jay.