Thank you, Bo. For Q2, we generated adjusted net investment income per share of $0.59 and adjusted net income per share of $0.64. Total investments were $3.1 billion, up from the prior quarter as a result of net funding activity. Total principal debt outstanding at quarter end was $1.7 billion and net assets were $1.5 billion or $16.74 per share, prior to the impact of the supplemental dividend that was declared yesterday. Our debt-to-equity ratio decreased from 1.2 times as of March 31 to 1.16 times as of June 30, and our weighted average debt-to-equity ratio for Q2 was 1.22 times. The decrease was primarily driven by proceeds from the equity raise, combined with over earning of the base dividend, which offset our net funding activity during the quarter. We continue to have ample liquidity to $659 million of unfunded revolver capacity at quarter end against $190 million of unfunded portfolio company commitments eligible to be drawn. As Josh referenced earlier, we executed a small equity raise during May, soon after our Q1 earnings call. Given our ongoing commitment to transparency, I’d like to take a moment to explain the framework of value creation we established for the issuance of new equity in our business. This framework requires the satisfaction of two criteria. The first is that we follow our historical approach of issuing equity at a premium to net asset value per share. TSLX shares have traded at a premium to the most recently reported NAV per share on 98% of such trading days over the almost nine and a half years that we have been listed. On the day we executed the equity offering, the stock closed at an 11% premium to the most recently reported NAV per share. After the applicable discount, the price paid by such investors represented a 6% premium to NAV per share. The first criterion was therefore satisfied. The second criterion requires us to have conviction that we are deploying new capital raised into assets generating estimated returns that exceed our calculated cost of capital. In other words, the return on equity available to us on new equity exceeds the marginal cost of that new equity. Let’s walk through the math, noting that there are many ways to look at it, but let’s assume that our cost of equity is 8.6%, which was sourced from Bloomberg. Based on this premise, we can back into the required return on new assets by applying the cost structure of our business, including the marginal cost of leverage fees, estimated credit losses and other expenses to our unit economics model. This calculation results in a 10.1% return on assets required to generate an 8.6% return on equity. In our case, we deployed the new equity capital into investments with an average asset level yield to maturity of 12.6%, resulting in estimated ROEs of 13.1% for the capital deployed, well above our estimated equity cost of capital. This illustration indicates that the second criterion was satisfied. We note that the return assumptions exclude the incremental benefit we may receive through additional activity-related fees associated with these assets. In addition to confirming that the equity raise exceeds our cost of capital, we also eliminated any material risk of a so-called J-curve effect on the earnings power of the business, are successfully deploying the capital post quarter end into new investments. In other words, this was not a case of requiring a visible future pipeline. We had already executed on the immediate opportunity set and the equity raise was a tool to bring our financial leverage profile back within our stated targets. Since we established this business in 2010, we have operated with the fundamental premise of doing right by our shareholders. We believe our approach to raising equity during the second quarter this year is an example of applying that philosophy. Turning now to our liquidity and funding profile we enhanced both this quarter through the extension of the maturity of our revolving credit facility. This amendment increased total commitments from $1.585 billion to $1.71 billion extended the maturity and added two new banks to the syndicate. Tighter capital constraints did, however, result in two new non-extending lenders with the maturity in 2027 rather than 2028. Our ability to maintain pricing and grow commitments during the recent credit contraction in the banking sector, highlights the importance of the size and scale of the Sixth Street platform as a key relationship for banks, in addition to our track record of avoiding credit losses. The upside of the facility further improved our liquidity profile, which represents three and a half times the amount of unfunded commitments eligible to be drawn. In terms of our debt maturity profile, we have satisfied two maturities in the last 12 months through unused capacity on our secured revolver. Our nearest maturity does not occur until November 2024, however, we are focused on normalizing our unsecured funding mix by continuing to target incremental funding through the unsecured market. We have been and remain a floating-rate borrower, and swap all of our fixed rate liabilities to floating to maintain a spread-based lending approach. This allows us to evaluate the debt capital markets for incremental opportunities without being deterred by the significant increase in treasury yields or volatility in underlying base rates. Moving to our presentation materials. Slide 8 contains this quarter’s NAV bridge. Walking through the main drivers of NAV growth, we added $0.59 per share from adjusted net investment income against our base dividend of $0.46 per share. As Josh mentioned, there was $0.01 per share of accrued capital gains incentive fee expenses related to this quarter’s net realized and unrealized gains. The equity raise, including the overallotment shares issued provided $0.04 per share of accretion to NAV. There was a $0.13 per share positive impact to NAV, primarily from the effect of tightening credit market spreads on the fair value of our portfolio. And finally, other changes resulted in a $0.10 per share decline in NAV from net unrealized losses on investments, partially offset by $0.02 per share of realized gains largely from the sale of equity investments. Moving on to our operating results detailed on Slide 9. We generated a record level of total investment income for the quarter of $107.6 million, up 12% compared to $96.5 million in the prior quarter. Walking through the components of income, interest and dividend income was $102.6 million, up from $92.2 million in the prior quarter, driven by higher all-in yields and net funding activity. Other fees representing prepayment fees and accelerated amortization of upfront fees from unscheduled paydowns was slightly lower at $0.9 million compared to $1.6 million in Q1, given the slowdown in repayment activity we continued to experience in Q2. Other income was $4.1 million compared to $2.8 million in the prior quarter. Net expenses, excluding the impact of a noncash accrual related to capital gains incentive fees were $57.2 million, up from $51.4 million in the prior quarter. This was primarily due to the upward movement in reference rates, which increased our weighted average interest rate on average debt outstanding from 6.7% to 7.1%, coupled with marginally higher average debt outstanding in Q2. For the year-to-date period, we’ve generated an annualized return on equity on adjusted net investment income of 13.9% and on adjusted net income of 16%. Net investment income has increased due to the asset-sensitive nature of our business and the rise in reference rates and net income has benefited from both net realized and unrealized gains on investments from company-specific events as well as the positive valuation impact of tightening credit market spreads. We believe we remain on track to meet or exceed the high end of our previously stated guidance range of $2.13 to $2.17 of adjusted NII per share for full year 2023, which corresponds to a return on equity of 13.2% plus. With that, I’ll turn it back to Josh for concluding remarks.