Thanks, Bilal. Good morning, everyone. As Bilal mentioned, we posted net investment income of $0.35 per share for the quarter. This compares favorably to our prior quarter’s net investment income of $0.33 per share. Due to the continued strength of our net investment income, the Board once again increased our quarterly distribution to $0.33 per share, which is up 10% from last quarter’s distribution of $0.30 per share and up 18% from the prior year period. Comparing net investment income quarter-over-quarter, we are up over 8%, in large part due to the rising interest rate environment coupled with the thoughtful construction of our balance sheet. We saw improvements quarter-over-quarter with higher interest and dividend income, offset slightly by lower fee income. The lower fee income was partly driven by our continued cautious approach to originations given the uncertainty and overall state of the economy. The positioning of our balance sheet will increase the likelihood that our performance will remain strong in this rising rate environment. Our net asset value per share decreased by less than 1% to $13.47 per share. As Bilal noted, despite the modest decline, year-end 2022 net asset value remains approximately 8% above its pre-pandemic level at the end of 2019. The decline this quarter was primarily related to some unrealized depreciation on our investment portfolio. Credit trends in our portfolio remained relatively stable, although we did see some incremental spread widening in the quarter which led to some unrealized losses. We also had a few borrowers that showed some deterioration in credit performance, including placing a small loan on non-accrual. At fair value, we currently have just 2.2% of our total investments on non-accrual. Turning to the income statement. Total investment income was $14 million, up from $13.4 million in the prior quarter. As I previously mentioned, this was primarily due to an increase in interest income, reflecting the rising interest rate environment as well as an increase in our dividend income. Total expenses of $9.3 million were up from last quarter’s $9 million, primarily due to higher interest expense due to increasing interest rates on our variable rate credit facilities. As I mentioned earlier, net investment income was $0.35 per share for the fourth quarter. This is a nice increase compared to last quarter’s net investment income of $0.33 per share. We continue to believe that earnings tailwinds exist given that the vast majority of our loan portfolio is floating rate while 69% of our liabilities are fixed at rates lower than current market levels for fixed rate debt. It is also worth noting that at quarter’s end, all of our outstanding debt matures in 2025 or later and approximately 54% of our outstanding debt at quarter’s end was unsecured. Excluding the SBIC debt, our debt-to-equity ratio decreased modestly quarter-over-quarter to approximately 1.58 times with slightly lower debt balances partially offset by lower fair value on our investments. Turning to our investments. We are pleased by the continued performance of our portfolio companies in this uncertain macroeconomic environment. We remain committed to being senior in the capital structure and selective in our underwriting. While we remain cautious with regard to new originations, several of our portfolio companies continue to identify add-on opportunities for growth, for which we either fund it in the fourth quarter or are evaluating incremental funding in the first quarter. As we have said in the past, in our opinion, knowing the company and its management team especially in today’s macroeconomic environment gives us relationship and informational advantages in making these investments. The majority of our investments are in loans. And as of December 31, nearly 100% of the loan portfolio at fair value was senior secured. In addition, at quarter’s end, 94% of the loan portfolio was floating rate and there has been a meaningful increase in benchmark interest rates. For instance, during the fourth quarter, three-month LIBOR increased by approximately 1% to 4.77% at quarter’s end and similarly three-month SOFR increased by approximately 1% to 4.59% at quarter’s end. The Fed increased rates twice during the fourth quarter for an aggregate increase of 125 basis points and the Fed increased rates by another 25 basis points so far in the first quarter of 2023 with the next FOMC meeting set for later this month. We continue to see an upward trajectory for interest rates so far this quarter in both LIBOR and SOFR, although less of an increase compared to the past few quarters. As a percentage of cost, our overall investment portfolio includes approximately 71% senior secured loans, 3% subordinated debt, 21% structured finance notes and 5% equity securities. Our portfolio remains diversified. At the end of the quarter, we had 86 portfolio investments totaling approximately $501 million on a fair value basis with an average investment size of $5.8 million or approximately 1% of the portfolio’s total fair value. For the quarter that ended December 31, the investment income yield on the interest-bearing portion of the portfolio was 12.7%, which includes all interest and amortization of deferred loan fees. This 110 basis point increase from last quarter is meaningful, reflecting the floating rate nature of our portfolio in this rising rate environment. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Bilal.