Thank you, Jim, and good afternoon. Regarding investment portfolio activity during Q1, TriplePoint Capital signed $315 million of term sheets with venture growth stage companies, compared to $130 million of term sheets in Q1 2024 and $323 million in Q4. With regards to new investment allocation to TPVG during the first quarter, we allocated $77 million in new commitments with five companies to TPVG, compared to $10 million in Q1 2024 and $72 million in Q4. 80% of the commitments made during the first quarter were to new portfolio companies in the AI and enterprise software sectors, reflecting our focus on obligors’ diversification and sector rotation. During the first quarter, we funded $28 million in debt investments to five companies, as compared to $14 million to three companies in Q1 and $50 million to three companies in Q4. These funded investments carried a weighted average annualized portfolio yield of 13.3%, down slightly from 13.5% in Q4. TPVG was at the low end of our guided range for fundings, primarily due to timing, with a number of fundings occurring immediately after quarter end, as demonstrated by our $50 million of fundings already here in the second quarter. During Q1, we had $17 million of loan prepayments, primarily from more season loans, resulting in an overall weighted average portfolio yield of 14.4%, as compared to core portfolio yield of 14.1%, excluding prepayments, which was slightly down from core portfolio yield of 14.2%, excluding prepayments in Q4. Four portfolio companies with debt outstanding raised $137 million during the quarter, compared to six portfolio companies raising $96 million in Q4. As of quarter end, we held warrants in 102 companies and equity investments in 48 companies, with a total fair value of $117 million, flat from Q4. As Jim mentioned, no new companies were added to our credit watch list during the quarter, and the weighted average, sorry, the weighted investment ranking of our debt investment portfolio was 2.12, as compared to 2.27 as at the end of the prior quarter. One company, Outfittery, was upgraded from Category 3 to Category 2 as part of its announced merger with Lookiero, where our loans were assumed in full and extended. The combined business, which will continue to focus exclusively on European markets, announced they are projected to generate over $130 million in revenues this year. We continue to have the same five companies in our Category 4 ranking. These are not new situations or reflective of our recent originations. These are companies that we generally identified years ago as challenged, and we continue to work with them and their investors to target profitability, liquidity and or exit events. With regards to tariffs, as Jim mentioned, although the situation is evolving, we have reviewed our portfolio to identify those companies potentially impacted and continue to monitor the potential near-term and long-term impact. We have not seen any impact to our AI, software, B2B and enterprise-focused portfolio companies, and believe that the risk, if any, lies with our consumer and e-commerce companies. We benefit from the fact that many of our consumer and e-commerce companies are either European companies primarily selling in Europe or U.S. companies that source locally. The few U.S. and European companies that we have determined may have some U.S. tariff exposure are primarily companies that source their products throughout Asia and sell in the U.S. Most of them are actively working to see if there are opportunities to change their supply chains and source products in lower tariff regions, increase pricing and/or expand their sales outside of the U.S. We expect to know more as the administration’s long-term approach is solidified, but we as of yet have not seen any material business impact to these few companies, but they are all preparing for it. On a more broader basis, we are seeing a significant increase in the volatility in the market and macro activity. As of yet, we have not seen material changes in venture capital equity investment activity from traditional venture capital investors. Although there was optimism earlier in the year that the IPO and M&A markets would open soon in 2025, we believe that the capital markets are closed for the time being, which is creating increased demand for investment capital, including debt financing. We expect more will be known over the course of the year, but as Jim mentioned, we continue to see and manage our pipeline in a disciplined fashion and probe prospective companies and the potential impact of these sources of volatility on their businesses as we determine whether they are worthy of our capital. As we step back, we saw improving market conditions in the venture capital market in the first quarter, both from a deal activity basis and from an equity fundraising perspective, and believe those events will bode well for the outlook for our obligors and their credit quality. But given the recent volatility and the geopolitical uncertainty, we will continue to real-time assess portfolio company performance and outlook over the course of the year and update our marks and values accordingly. During the quarter, we’ve also participated in Revolut’s secondary process, selling $2.3 million of our holdings, resulting in a realized gain of $2.3 million on our initial investment. The secondary process was originally announced in August 2024 at a $45 billion valuation primarily for Revolut employees. We continue to hold $34.4 million of warrants and equity at fair value in Revolut. As some of our investors may be aware, Revolut just filed its annual financials in April and announced the revenues of $4 billion, up 72%, and net profit of 1 billion, roughly double from 2023. In closing, we remain focused on executing our plan for position TPVG for 2025 and beyond by building overall scale, diversification and durability, targeting well-positioned and well-capitalized new customers in attractive sectors, and increasing the pace of new commitments and investment fundings. We will remain disciplined and mindful of the volatile market environment as we continue along the path with the goal of driving TPVG’s earning power over the course of 2025. With that, I will now turn the call over to Mike.