Thank you, Javier. Good morning. Sorry, apologies. Please turn to Slide 5. Net income was $159 million compared to $257 million in Q4. Excluding the impact of the $68 million DTA allowance reversal in Q4, net income decreased by $30 million in Q1. Net interest income was $532 million, a decrease of $28 million from Q4, $9 million of this variance was related to a lower date count during the quarter. On a taxable-equivalent basis, net interest income was $570 million compared to $622 million in Q4. The variance was primarily a result of higher interest expense and deposit of $54 million, resulting from increased deposit rates, mainly from Puerto Rico public deposits, and to a lesser extent, Popular Bank. Non-interest income was $162 million, an increase of $3 million from Q4. Included in this result was a $7 million litigation-related insurance claim reimbursement. The provision for credit losses was $47 million, compared to $48 million in the fourth quarter. Total operating expenses were $441 million, a decrease of $21 million from the prior quarter. This reduction was primarily driven by lower professional fees by $16 million, as well as lower technology and software expenses by $10 million. Historically, these costs tend to be lower than the first quarter of every year. This is more accentuated in the first quarter of this year, due to our multiyear transformation initiatives. During Q1, we had $6 million transformation-related expenses compared to $10 million last quarter. As the transformation progresses, expenses will shift from advisory and conceptual plans to the development and execution of implementation plans. As a result, we expect a slower pace of expenditure initially, as in Q1, and an acceleration as the year progresses. We continue to anticipate transformation-related expenses of $50 million in 2023. Other large expense variances were lower seasonal business promotion expenses by $9 million, which was somewhat offset by higher personnel costs by $9 million, primarily related to the previously disclosed increase in hourly minimum wage at BPPR, that took effect in January, and lower OREO benefit of $7 million, mostly due to lower gain on sale of properties. Our quarterly expense trajectory has historically ramped up as the year progresses. We anticipate that 2023 will be consistent with that experience, and continue to expect expenses for the year of approximately $1.87 billion. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was 23%. For the full year 2023, we expect the effective tax rate to be within a range of 21% to 26% higher than the range provided during our last webcast. In the near-term, we expect to run our banks with a higher level of reserves at the Fed, which leads to less extent taxes and income and therefore a higher tax rate than we have previously anticipated. Please turn to Slide 6. Net interest income was $532 million. On a taxable-equivalent basis, it was $570 million, $51 million lower than in the fourth quarter. Net interest margin decreased by 6 basis points to 3.22% in Q1. On a taxable-equivalent basis, NIM was 3.46%, a decrease of 18 basis points. The decrease is driven by higher interest expense on deposits due to a significant, though anticipated 103 basis point increase in the cost of public deposits. This was partially offset by higher loan balances and yields, plus an improved mix of earning assets. At the end of the first quarter, public deposits were roughly $15.5 billion or $15.8 billion, excluding $700 million in deposits held and managed by our Trust division. This compares to $15.8 billion and $15.2 billion, respectively at year end. In the past, we had excluded the balances in Trust from our discussion about Puerto Rico public deposits. Given that these are managed by our Fiduciary Services Division, where we act as custodian or escrow agent. However, we have decided to aggregate these amounts to reflect the overall relationship with government entities and provide more visibility to collateralize deposits. These Trust deposits have always been reported in our total deposit balance. During 2023, now inclusive of Trust deposits, we expect public deposits to be in a range of $14 billion to $16 billion, essentially unchanged from our previous expectations of $13 billion to $15 billion that excluded Trust deposits. It’s important to reiterate that by law in Puerto Rico public deposits must be 100% collateralized. Any decrease in the level of these deposits will have no significant impact on our liquidity. Excluding Puerto Rico public deposits, consolidated deposit balances increased by $180 million in the quarter, primarily time and saving deposit of Popular Bank gathered through its direct channel. This compares to a decrease of $1.4 billion in non-public deposits during the fourth quarter. In Q1, we continue to see some commercial and high net worth clients pursuing better yields on excess liquidity, moving this funds outside the banking sector. However, we have been able to capture a good portion of this movement in our broker dealer, which saw an increase in assets under management of approximately $450 million. Since the end of Q1, overall deposits have increased by approximately $700 million. Our interest rate sensitivity continues to be relatively neutral. As the year progresses, we expect the margin to resume an upward trajectory. The timing will depend on the interaction of our loan growth and mix, deposit balances and the pace of re-pricing of public and incrementally non-public deposits. Our ending loan balances increased by $161 million compared to Q4, driven by growth on all loan segments at BPPR and commercial loans at PB. We are encouraged by the demand for credit at BPPR and PB. We will continue to take advantage of opportunities to extend credit, thereby improving the use and yield of our existing liquidity. Please turn to Slide 7. Deposit beta for the current tightening cycle are now at or above the prior cycle. We have seen a total cumulative deposit beta of 24% to-date. However, in Q1, we saw an acceleration of deposit pricing. In BPPR, total deposit costs increased by 35 basis points led by public sector deposits. In PB, total deposit costs increased by 67 points led by retail deposits, as we increased the use of our online deposit channel. In Puerto Rico, our combined retail and commercial deposit beta cycle to-date have been less than 10%. As we’ve discussed over the past couple of quarters, given the rapid shift to higher short-term interest rates, we expected a significant increase in the cost of public deposits. In the first quarter, the cost increased by 103 basis points versus our January estimate of roughly 120 basis points. The difference rests in lower average balances and the mechanics of the interest expense calculation. We expect the costs of public deposits to increase by approximately 60 basis points in Q2. The deposit pricing agreement with the Puerto Rico public sector is market linked with a lag. This source of funding results in an attractive spread under our market rates. Please turn to Slide 8. We have added the following two slides in our deck, because of the increased focus on liquidity, borrowings and deposit composition. Liquidity sources for the Corporation increased by $1.3 billion in Q1, 77% of this liquidity resides in excess funds at the Fed and unpledged securities. Borrowings for the quarter were flat at $1.4 billion. We reduced our Federal Home Loan Bank borrowings by $366 million in Q1. However, the issuance of our senior notes due in 2028, roughly compensated for that reduction. There were no incremental borrowings during the quarter for the Federal Home Loan Bank, the Fed Discount Window or the Bank Term Funding Program. On March 13, 2023, Popular issued $400 million or 7.25% senior notes during 2028. We intend to use a portion of the net proceeds of the offering to redeem or repay $300 million principal amount of our outstanding senior notes that mature in September 2023. Please turn to Slide 9. The summation of transactional accounts and time deposits with balances over $250,000 ended Q1 at $13.8 billion or 23% of total deposit balances. The liquidity sources described in Slide 8, the prior slide, totaled $18.3 billion covering 135% of deposits over $250,000. The balances of our non-interest-bearing deposits have been steady. Most of our recent balance changes have been in interest-bearing accounts. Please turn to Slide 10. Our investment portfolio is almost entirely comprised of treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities, which carry minimal credit risk, including our cash position, this portfolio has an average duration of approximately 2.6 years. As discussed previously, given the rapid increase in rates in 2022, as well as the uncertain outlook for interest rates, in October of last year, we transferred to held-to-majority $6.5 billion of US treasuries, thereby reducing the future impact of rates on tangible book value. At the time, this action reduced AOCI exposure to interest rates by about a third. When transferred to HTM, these positions had a pre-tax unrealized loss of $873 million, which will be amortized back into capital throughout the remaining life of the transferred positions. As of the end of the first quarter, the balance of this unrealized loss stood at $789 million, a reduction of $43 million from Q4 and $84 million from the transferred date. We expect this loss to be amortized back into capital through the remaining life of the portfolio at a rate of approximately 5% per quarter through 2026. As a result of the timing of this transfer, and given the level of rates at quarter end, all the unrealized losses relate to HTM portfolio are already reflected in our tangible capital. Therefore, at the end of the quarter, there are no significant recognized marks related to our HTM book. Please turn to Slide 11. Our return on tangible equity was 11.5% in the quarter. Regulatory capital levels remained strong. Our common equity tier 1 ratio in Q1 of 16.7% increased by 34 basis points from Q4. Tangible book value per share at quarter end was $50.15, an increase of $5.18 per share or almost 12% from Q4. This improvement is driven mostly by a favorable variance of $192 million in a net unrealized losses on securities available-for-sale, and quarterly net income of $159 million, partially offset by dividends declared in the quarter. Finally, touching on capital, we will revisit future capital actions in the second half of 2023. Our long-term outlook and capital return has not changed, anchored in our strong regulatory capital ratios. However, in the near-term, we need to get more certainty on the outlook for rates in the economy, and also for clarity on the potential regulatory response to recent events in the banking sector. Over time, we expect our regulatory capital ratios to gravitate towards the level of our Mainland peers plus a buffer. With that, I turn the call over to Lidio.