Thank you, Rob. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. As you're aware, we issued our earnings this morning before the market opened, and I hope you've had a chance to review our results for the period ending March 31, 2025 (sic) [ 2026 ], which can also be found on our website. On today's call, I'll begin by addressing our first quarter results and current market conditions. Then Joyson Thomas, our Chief Financial Officer, will discuss our performance in greater detail, after which we will open the floor for questions. At a high level, our first quarter results reflected three main themes. One, previously flagged credit marks drove net realized and unrealized losses for the quarter; two, core earnings moderated, reflecting a lower portfolio yield in Q1, driven in part by one additional investment being placed on nonaccrual; and three, share repurchases provided a meaningful offset through NAV accretion. More specifically, our results for the first quarter of 2026 included net realized and unrealized losses that were largely consistent with the markdown we had forewarned investors about on our last shareholder call. As we shared on that call, we had three accounts where we expected markdowns this quarter, Honors Holdings, Outward Hound, and Lumen LATAM. And those positions drove the bulk of our net realized and unrealized losses for the quarter. Q1 GAAP net investment income and core NII were $5.6 million or $0.253 per share compared with Q4 GAAP net investment income and core NII of $6.6 million or $0.287 per share. NAV per share at the end of Q1 was $11.47 compared with $11.68 at the end of Q4, a decrease of approximately 1.8%. The change in NAV reflected the net realized and unrealized losses of approximately $0.284 per share, partially offset by share repurchases that were accretive to NAV by approximately $0.08 per share. NAV was also impacted by distributions paid during the quarter, which included a $0.01 per share supplemental dividend. We will continue our distribution policy framework that was previously discussed where the company intends to distribute a quarterly base distribution of $0.25 as well as make potential supplemental distributions above the base level in the future, pursuant to our distribution policy. Turning to shareholder value. Our shares have continued to trade at a meaningful discount to NAV, and both management and the Board remain focused on actions that we believe can help enhance shareholder value over time. So far, that focus has included disciplined portfolio positioning, selective capital deployment, accretive share repurchases and steps to support distributable earnings. As we discussed on our last call, the Board expanded the company's share repurchase program and late in the first quarter, we also implemented a 10b5-1 plan to allow us to continue executing on that authorization outside of our normal trading window in accordance with the plan's terms. We remained active under the program during Q1 and into Q2, and those repurchases were accretive to NAV, as I mentioned earlier. Joyson will provide additional detail on the quarter's repurchase activity. More broadly, while our stock continues to trade at a substantial discount to book value, we believe repurchasing shares remains one of the most attractive uses of capital available to us. At the same time, we're continuing to balance that opportunity against new investment activity and our targeted leverage levels. In addition, the adviser has agreed to extend its temporary voluntary waiver of the incentive fee for the second quarter of 2026, reducing the applicable fee rate from 20% to 17.5%. We view that extension as another constructive step to support distributable earnings and shareholder value. As we have said previously, this fee waiver is temporary and any decision regarding future periods will be revisited based on the then current conditions and in consultation with the Board of Directors. We have been encouraged by the alignment shown through open market purchases by certain officers and directors, which we believe further reflects confidence in the underlying value of WhiteHorse Finance. Turning to our portfolio activity. We had gross capital deployments of $25.4 million in Q1, which was more than offset by repayments and sales of $38 million, resulting in net repayments of approximately $12.6 million before the effects of transferring assets into the STRS JV. Gross capital deployments consisted of three new originations totaling $18.5 million and the remaining accounts were deployed to fund add-ons to 12 existing investments. In addition, there was $0.7 million in net fundings on revolver commitments during the quarter. Of our three new originations in Q1, one was a non-sponsored deal and two were sponsor. The sponsor deals are targeted to be transferred to the STRS JV. Our new originations in Q1 had an average leverage of approximately 5.5x EBITDA. All of our Q1 deals were first lien loans. Pricing reflected competitive market conditions and our focus remained on structure and credit quality. Total repayments and sales were primarily driven by complete or partial realizations in 3 portfolio companies, Trimlite, Monarch Collective Holdings and Lumen LATAM. During the quarter, the BDC transferred two new deals and two existing investments to the STRS JV totaling $18.9 million. At the end of Q1, the STRS JV portfolio had an aggregate fair value of $327.1 million and an average effective yield of 9.9%. We continue to successfully utilize the STRS JV and believe WhiteHorse's Finance equity investment in the JV continues to provide attractive returns for our shareholders. After net repayments and JV transfer activity as well as realized and unrealized losses recognized during the quarter, total investments decreased from the prior quarter by $35.6 million to $543 million. This compares to our portfolio's fair value of $578.6 million at the end of Q4. During the quarter, we recognized $4.7 million in net realized losses and approximately $1.6 million of net unrealized losses for an aggregate total of $6.3 million in net realized and unrealized losses in Q1, approximately $0.284 per share. The net mark-to-market losses were primarily driven by a $2.8 million unrealized loss in Honors Holdings, a $2.1 million unrealized loss in Outward Hound, partially offset by a $2.6 million gain from the reversal of unrealized losses on investment realizations and approximately $0.4 million of net markups across the portfolio. In addition, we recognized realized losses primarily driven by a $3 million -- by $3 million from Lumen LATAM sale as well as $1.1 million from a foreign exchange loss on the repayment of the Trimlite Canadian term loan and $0.2 million from the sale of the Therm-O-Disc asset. Importantly, the markdowns on Honors Holdings, Outward Hound and Lumen LATAM were the same three credits we identified for investors on our prior call as situations on which we expected to recur markdowns in the quarter. At the end of Q1, 98.8% of our debt portfolio was first lien, senior secured and our portfolio continued to reflect the balanced mix of sponsor and non-sponsor investments with non-sponsor representing approximately 38% of the portfolio at fair value. The weighted average effective yield on our income-producing debt investments decreased to 10.8% at the end of Q1 compared to 11% at the end of Q4. The weighted average effective yield on our overall portfolio also decreased to 8.7% at the end of Q1 compared to approximately 9.1% at the end of Q4, which was affected by the one new investment being put on nonaccrual during the quarter. With respect to nonaccrual status, Outward Hound was placed on nonaccrual during the quarter. And with the final sale of our residual position occurring this quarter, Therm-O-Disc was removed from our nonaccruals. Excluding the STRS JV, nonaccrual investments represented 3.6% of the total debt portfolio at fair value compared with 2.4% at fair value at the end of the prior quarter. The four issuers on nonaccrual at quarter end were Honors Holdings, New Cycle Solutions, Outward Hound, and Playmonster. As always, we continue to do actively managed activities on our underperforming credits, leveraging our dedicated restructuring resources and the broader capabilities of H.I.G. With respect to Outward Hound, we continue to work with the borrower and believe a debt restructuring is likely in coming months with an expectation that part of that asset will return to accrual status based on the new structure. Given the complexity of the process, we believe that outcome is more likely to occur next quarter than this quarter, although there can be no assurance until the restructuring is completed as to what will happen and when. On Honors Holdings, also known as Camarillo Fitness, the company continues to struggle, and we do not yet know whether we will have a further markdown this quarter. Lumen LATAM is now completely exited, so that situation is resolved. At this time, we are not aware of any further material markdowns beyond what I have just described. Aside from the credits on nonaccrual, our portfolio continues to perform well, and our portfolio reviews on any companies where there is underperformance, we are seeing private equity owners support those credits with new equity, which is an indication from the private equity firms that they have confidence in those companies and borrowers. I would also note that consistent with what we shared last quarter, we have modest exposure to the Internet or software companies, the BDC software exposure across 6 portfolio names represents approximately 11.1% of the portfolio at cost and 9.9% at fair value. Market conditions remain competitive, although for several months, geopolitical events had slowed the M&A market with transaction volume being lower than normal. That said, over the past few weeks, we've seen a recovery in deal flow volumes, and our team is currently working on deals at close to 100% of capacity. Negative press around direct lending and private credit has resulted in a shift in supply and demand, particularly on larger deals. On the smaller deals as a result pricing is up 25 to 50 basis points. And on the midsize and larger deals, pricing is up more like 50 to 100 basis points, with most of that movement being on sponsor side, where prices had compressed, and we had previously shared with the market that pricing was very aggressive. In the lower mid-market, we're seeing pricing of SOFR 475 to 525. In the mid-market sponsor pricing is SOFR 500 to 550. And in the larger cap market, pricing of SOFR plus 500 to 575. The non-sponsor market remains stable at pricing of SOFR plus 600 and above. We are also highly focused on minimizing liability management execution risk in new investments and our portfolio. For investors less familiar with the term, LME risk refers to the risk that a borrower can move assets away from the existing lenders and pledge them to new lenders effectively subordinating the original senior debt. We are working to ensure that structures and documentation provide adequate protection against this risk. Looking forward, there is too much geopolitical and consumer sentiment uncertainty to have any clarity as to where the market is going to be in the balance of the year. What I would say is that the mid-market and lower mid-market that we participate in continue to function other than the slight price increase and conservatism on credit standards, including extremely high conservatism on anything software related, the markets are functioning. In the non-sponsor market conditions remain stable and less competitive than in the sponsor market. Average leverage is approximately 4x to 4.5x and pricing continues to be generally at SOFR plus 600 and above with our non-sponsored portfolio performing as well as or better than our sponsor portfolio. We continue to focus significant resources on the non-sponsored market where there is better risk return in many cases and much less competition than what we're seeing in the sponsor market. We currently have 21 originators covering 12 regional markets. Given market conditions, we are looking for good risk return across the market and finding surprisingly good opportunities. Additionally, we continue to expect a normal level of repayment activity over time, although actual repayment timing will be driven by M&A, refinancing activity and company-specific situations. As for our pipeline, we currently have 10 deals mandated. Of those 10 deals, 4 are non-sponsor and 6 are sponsor. All of the non-sponsored deals are priced at SOFR plus 600 or above. And all of the sponsor deals will be targeted for the STRS JV and all of the non-sponsor deals are targeted for the balance sheet of the BDC. While there can be no assurance that any of these deals will close or whether we have room in the BDC for any of all of those deals, we will be assessing capacity based on repayments and the availability of capital to continue the share buyback. Subsequent to quarter end, no deals have closed in the BDC, with capital reserved for share buybacks, the BDC's remaining capacity is very limited, at approximately $15 million for new assets on the balance sheet after reserving roughly $11 million for the share repurchase program. At the end of the first quarter, the STRS JV's remaining capacity was approximately $35 million and pro forma for recently mandated deals to eventually be transferred and anticipated repayments, the JV's capacity is approximately only $10 million. With that, I'll turn the call over to Joyson for additional performance details and a review of our portfolio composition. Joyson?