Thanks, Paul. That's an excellent question. Thank you for your question. We've been focused for the last five years and prioritizing capital preservation over yield. We wanted to build as robust of a -- a balance sheet in terms of assets that can weather a storm. I think we've done a pretty good job of that. And kind of 109 companies now have only 2 non-accruals after kind of this very challenging quarter. The income has been -- has come down due to LIBOR. LIBOR has come down quite dramatically. We do have LIBOR floors about 1% on almost the entire portfolio. But, no too long ago, LIBOR was kind of at 270 basis points, today, it’s about 125 basis points. So, that has certainly impacted the yield and the portfolio. In addition, we have brought down leverage a little bit obviously, in tune with times and in tune with kind of capital preservation. Over the last quarter, we brought our leverage down a little bit. So, those are the factors that have impacted earnings to date. As we look ahead, we're going to evaluate the portfolio and the strength of the portfolio, we have to remain strong, we’re going to evaluate the earning stream of the company. Certainly, the new deals that come in over time should be higher yields. Certainly, there are some deals that we have where we are getting higher yields due to amendments. So, that could and should help the income stream. That said, there's no real outlook of LIBOR kind of going up again. So, we're going to kind of evaluate all these things over time. We do a substantial spillover. So, there's no kind of quick decisions where I think we're going to kind of have the next couple quarters go, in terms of thee portfolio, number one; in terms of the yields on the portfolio, number two, and kind of even make a call a few quarters down the road as we see the long term earnings stream. So, the income has come down. But I think we're very pleased that from the standpoint of asset value and NAV and capital preservation, this portfolio is very, very robust.