Thank you, Paul. This first quarter of this year was indeed very, very strong in terms of financial performance. I will let Susan Landi, who's already typing an email to Paul right now asking for a salary increase, address more details about the performance. But it was enough of a strong quarter to allow us to actually raise guidance by several cents for the full year. This reflects also our fundamental belief that remains as strong as ever, that this is an exceptionally strong asset class, especially in times of uncertainty and turbulence that we are facing right now. Building on Paul's comments, we live in a world of fundamental kind of minimal surpluses in food production and looking forward down in the next few years and decades, with the world population expected to expand and the ability to produce food not expanding nearly at the same rate. We still need to produce every single bushel or kilogram or ton of food that we can on a worldwide basis. The world simply cannot afford the production, the food production of the largest food producer in the world, the United States, to be marked up significantly or taken out of the global market altogether. So again, remember that while farmer profitability in the short-term might be influenced by trade wars, if not offset by the federal government has done in prior administrations, the fundamental values that all the of the land that we own are really dependent on long-term expectations about world population, food demand and so on and so forth. Our strategy for this year again also remains fundamentally unchanged. We will continue to deploy capital selectively when it makes sense, to do so, for example, we've done some small acquisitions. We've deployed capital in our loan program. They were both opportunities that we found very accretive, even though relatively minor in terms of size. And we will continue to evaluate dispositions from our portfolio using proceeds for general corporate purposes, including also buying back stock. When we look our – at the gap between the NAV, as Paul indicated, and our stock price, we continue to believe that our own stock is effectively the cheapest farmland we can buy, and we will probably continue to do so as appropriate and as it makes sense. With that, I will now turn the call over to our CFO, Susan Landi, for her overview of the company's financial performance. Susan?