I would say pricing has tightened a bit here over the last six months and maybe a bit more recently. But certainly, private credit continues to carry an attractive premium relative to the syndicated market. The tightening in the syndicated market has resulted in the average premium in the private market over BSL rising to over 200 basis points in January, which is a six-month high and up from a little over 100 basis points a year ago. That spread, that 200 basis points, I think will tighten again over time. But because of that tightening in the BSL market, that’s really put, I would say, more pressure on the upper bid market in private credit. So, call it, a couple of hundred million of EBITDA and larger which is oftentimes a BSL replacement option versus the tightening that we are seeing in the core and lower-mid market, which is where Crescent spends most of its time, core-mid market, I would say, is sort of 50 to 150 and lower-mid market is 10 to 50. We are seeing a bit of tightening there, but I would say it’s not as acute as what the upper-mid market is currently experiencing. The other pressure on the upper-mid market besides sort of comping to BSL is the amount of inflows coming in that’s chasing that opportunity, particularly from some sizable institutional products, but also from the significant capital that’s coming in on the non-traded BDC side of things from the retail market. If I were to characterize pricing today, I would say, for unis in the lower-mid market, I would say, we are still in the 50, 75, up to 625 million range in the core-mid market, probably 550, 575, and then in the upper-mid market, I think it’s tighter than that, probably 525 to 550.