Thank you, Cami. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. With us today is our President, Bo Stanley, and our CFO, Ian Simmonds. For our call, we will review our full year and fourth quarter highlights and pass it over to Bo to discuss activity in the portfolio. Ian will review our financial performance in more detail, and I will conclude with final remarks before opening the call to Q&A. After the market closed yesterday, we reported strong fourth quarter results with adjusted net investment income of $0.61 per share or an annualized operating return on equity of 14.2% and adjusted net income of $0.54 per share, an annualized return on equity of 12.5%. As presented in our financial statements, our Q4 net investment income and net income per share accrued capital gains incentive fee expense, inclusive of the unwind of the non-cash, were a penny per share higher than the adjusted figures. In Q4, we earned $0.15 per share of activity-based fees, including dividend income, representing the highest amount in seven quarters. We continue to build net asset value per share from $17.12 as of September 30 to $17.16 as of December 31. Additionally, our base settlement remains well covered, with adjusted net investment income of $0.61 per share exceeding our base quarterly dividend by $0.15 per share or 33%. For the full year 2024, we generated adjusted net investment income per share of $2.33, representing an operating return on equity of 13.8%, and full-year adjusted net income per share of $1.97, a return on equity of 11.6%. As we've always said, return on equity on net income is a measure that matters. On that basis, we generated nearly 12% for 2024. This remains well above our estimated 9% cost of capital and significantly above the Q3 LTM average return on equity for the BDC sector of approximately 9.1%. Further, we delivered an increase of 70 basis points on net asset value per share from $17.04 as of December 31, 2023, to $17.16 as of December 31, 2024. Looking back at 2024, our results were driven by a number of factors, including a shift in interest rates, additional activity-based fees, credit headwinds, and movement in new investment spreads. We'll highlight the impact from each of these components, starting with the tailwinds. First and most obvious, interest rates remained higher for longer, providing an earnings boost for the sector. Twelve months ago, the forward curve indicated interest rates of approximately 3.6% today. This compares to three-month three-year SOFR swap rate today of approximately 4% or 40 basis points difference. Higher base interest rates for LTM operating ROEs for the sector through Q3 of 12.3% and 13.9% for TSOF, well above the long-term sector average of 8.9% for TSOX. The rate environment in 2024 contributed approximately $0.03 per share of net investment income above our guidance. In addition to a slight uplift from rates, we earned $0.44 per share of gross activity-based fee income, including dividend and other income in 2024, representing the highest amount since 2021. A significant portion of the income came in the fourth quarter as we experienced a resurgence of repayment activity in our portfolio. This resulted in $0.15 per share of activity-based fee income for the quarter above our trailing three-year historical average of $0.09 per share. This fee income is a product of our in-depth underwriting and selective investment approach as we carefully structure investments to include call protection and other features that create value for our shareholders. In 2024, activity-based fee income contributed approximately $0.15 per share of net investment income above our guidance. Now pivoting to the headwinds. Consistent with our message for the last couple of years, we expected credit to weaken on the margin in tailspin merch. Over the last twelve months, we experienced idiosyncratic credit deterioration across two portfolio companies, Astrac Acquisition Corp and Lithium Technologies, both of which we added to non-accrual during the year. The lost interest income from these two investments after being placed on non-accrual status resulted in a $0.07 per share negative impact to net investment income in 2024 relative to our forecast. Even with the lower fair value on these investments, we continue to grow net asset value year over year by 70 basis points. This compares to a decline of approximately 160 basis points on average for the BDC peer group through Q3 2024 compared to Q4 2023. For the same period, net asset value per share for TSOF increased 50 basis points, representing roughly 210 basis points of outperformance. Finally, new investment spreads moved tighter throughout the year, driven by the significant amount of capital raised in the direct lending space combined with muted M&A volume. This is the supply and imbalance that we've talked about on several of our previous earnings calls. To illustrate the movement of spreads in 2024, we'll compare Q4 2023 to Q3 2024, given we are still early in the fourth quarter reporting cycle. As of Q4 2023, the weighted average spread on first lien performing assets in our portfolio and for public BDCs was 8.3% and 6.4%, respectively. This compares to a weighted average spread as of Q3 2024 of 8% and 6.1%, respectively, representing declines of 30 basis points for TSOX and the public BDC sector. As the market moved tighter in 2024, the impact of tighter spreads on new deals lowered our net investment income by approximately $0.07 per share compared to our forecast for the year. That being said, we continue to put on new deals at wider spreads relative to the sector, as evidenced by our weighted average spread on new deals in Q3 2024 being approximately 150 basis points wider than the average for public BDC peers. Although there were puts and takes, we met our guidance on an operating income basis for the year. Looking ahead to 2025, we believe that earnings potential for BDCs is largely tied to portfolio spreads. To put it simply, the deals you do today will ultimately be a driver of your returns in the future. As an illustrative example, we've calculated the asset return estimated return on equity assuming our entire portfolio had a weighted average spread equal to the weighted average spread for new investments in the fourth quarter of 6.4%. Based on our balance sheet as of year-end, the three-year SOFR swap rate of 4%, 1.5% OID over a three-year average life, and consistent with our unit economics over the last year, a weighted average of 640 basis points implies a return on equity of 9% to 10%, which assuming zero to 50 basis points of credit losses on assets. We can compare this to earnings potential for the sector by using the weighted average spread on new first lien in the third quarter of 529 basis points for public BDCs. To simplify analysis, we'll assume management incentive fees, leverage, cost of funds, and operating expenses are based on the Q3 LTM average for the sector. Using the three-month SOFR swap rate of 4%, 1.5% OID over a three-year average life, the long-term annualized return net loss rates according to Cliffwater Direct Lending Index of 102 basis points, a weighted average portfolio spread of 529 basis points generates approximately 5% return to equities for the sector. It is important to note that these returns estimates assume a three-year swap rate of 4%. If base rates move lower, ROEs will move lower too, given the asset sensitivity and some liability sensitivity for the BDC space. As we've said in the past, the front book is tomorrow's back book. This was a big theme we highlighted during our Q2 earnings call six months ago and remains top of mind when we make our investments. To be clear, the analysis is for illustrative purposes only. If our entire portfolio called away, our return on equity in the term would be boosted given the impact of embedded call protection and amortization of upfront fees. While it may feel like the value proposition of direct lending is eroding on the margin given spread levels in the market today, we set up our business with differentiated sourcing channels to deliver a sustainable return profile for our shareholders. We continue over-earning our cost of capital even in a more competitive, tighter spread environment and believe this will be a key contributor to the dispersion of returns for the sector in the future. Yesterday, our board approved a base quarterly dividend of $0.46 per share to shareholders of record as of March 14, payable on March 31. Our board also declared a supplemental dividend of $0.07 per share related to our Q4 earnings to shareholders of record as of February 28, payable on March 20. Our year-end net asset value per share adjusted for the supplemental dividend that was declared yesterday is $17.09, and we estimate that our spillover income is approximately $1.23 per share. With that, I'll now pass it over to Bo to discuss this quarter's investment activity.