Thank you, Jorge, and good morning to all. Now let's move on to Slide #8, please, on the bank's quarterly reports of operations. So profit for the first quarter 2021 was $12.8 million, down 19% on a sequential quarter basis and 30% year-on-year, mainly driven by lower net interest income. This relates to the impact of a sharp decrease in LIBOR-based rates in the bank's assets and liabilities, coupled with loan average volume still behind pre-COVID level, even though the bank has shown a steady loan growth trend for 3 consecutive quarters, as Jorge just mentioned. I will be addressing the NII variation in more detail in a few minutes. Results for the quarter also reflect stable commission income, mainly from the letters of credit business with an important participation in the LC confirmations for the imports of refined oil. With respect to fees from restructuring and syndications activity, for the first time since the onset of the crisis, we are starting to see traction in a pipeline of value-added transactions. We just announced one in late April, a $300 million facility for CMI Energía, a leading player in renewable energy generation in Central America, in which Bladex acted as joint lead arranger. We expect to see more of this kind of activity in the coming quarters. Expenses remained closely controlled, down 10% on a sequential quarter basis due to the usual seasonality of the first quarter of the year. Year-on-year, expenses were down by 13%, mainly on lower personnel expenses mostly related to decreased performance-based variable compensation provision. In addition, the bank recorded no credit provisions during the quarter as originations remain focused on high-quality countries and sectors, while the bank continues to downsize riskier exposures, being able to collect virtually 100% of scheduled maturities. So let's move on to Slide 9, where we present the trends in annual rates and volumes, which explain lower net interest income of $18.9 million for the quarter, down $6.9 million or 27% year-on-year. Even with the same net lending spread differential of about 150 basis points, when compared to the same period of 2020 and of 2019, net interest income was down $4.2 million year-on-year, mainly on lower LIBOR-based rates, which decreased 76% or about 153 basis points year-on-year and by 83% or around 239 basis points when compared to a normalized 2019. Since the bank runs a mostly floating rate book, it's obvious that in a changing market rate environment, both sides of the balance sheet resist within a short period of time. In this manner, the portion of assets financed by liabilities is generally naturally hedged. This is why net lending spread remains relatively unchanged at 150 basis points. But the major impact relates to the portion of assets financed by the bank's equity, as the overall asset yield decreases on lower market rate with the impact resulted -- resulting in lower net interest margin and net interest income.