All right. Thanks, Danny. In originations, the third quarter remains solid as we purchase $322 million of new contracts. That compares to $318 million of new contracts in Q2 and that compares to $468 million of new contracts during the third quarter of 2022. The slight uptick quarter-over-quarter in originations reflects the strong demand in our space. The reduction in volume year-over-year was certainly purposeful as we scaled back due to certain macroeconomic headwinds that Brad discussed and we continue to operate with a tighter credit box and kept a keen eye on affordability of our product for our customers. In terms of the ever important affordability factor in our space, we continue to hold firm on our payment to income and debt to income ratios. Equally important, our monthly payment remained relatively low for our space at $531. That compares to the upper A$500s for a used car price that’s irrespective of a subprime customer or a near prime customer and that compares to a car payment in the upper $700s for a new car. So we -- our payment target remains quite low for our space. As I mentioned, demand remains strong in the third quarter. We are getting roughly 8,000 applications a day, which is roughly the same as we received in 2022 when we originated a 31-year company record of $1.85 billion. Our approval rate ticked down to 51%, which is significantly down from 2022 Q3 of 70%. Again, that’s not a cause for concern as that drop was purposeful as we significantly tightened our credit box at the end of 2022 and really dug in at the beginning of 2023 on that credit tightening. Specifically, we tightened our LTV, we capped payments in certain program segments, we tightened job stability and residency requirements, and we definitely made less exceptions. Again, this has lowered our approval percentage, but most significantly and especially more importantly, it’s lowered our LTVs, which is a leading indicator of losses. Our average amount financed for the quarter was $20,100, which is down about $900 quarter-over-quarter and down a whopping $3,000 in Q3 of 2022. This drop is likely the result of a major pullback in backend products that we offer, specifically warranty and GAP. So we’ve allowed less of those backend products to be financed, which has lowered the LTV caps, which has lowered the amount financed and this has also contributed to our monthly payment remaining relatively low compared to our peers. We continue to hold a strong APR in Q3, registering an average APR at 21%, which is about a 0.5-point lower quarter-over-quarter and significantly higher than the average APR in Q3 of 2022 of 18%. Again, it’s important to recognize that this APR was achieved despite materially tightening our credit box in late 2022 and early 2023. In terms of competition, we continue to see waves of credit unions come in and come out of this space with lower rates and then they basically pull out of the space when they realize the losses don’t meet their expectations. But like I said, demand remains strong, so there’s more than enough business for the five or six market makers in the space, including us. In terms of growth, there remains a tremendous opportunity as there are no new entrants into the market. Regional players are continuing to pull out and credit unions continually learn month-over-month that this is probably not their best target market. We are holding firm at $100 million a month until we see the fruits of our credit tightening and our portfolio performance, but nonetheless, we are planning to grow when the time requires it. Moving on to portfolio performance, certainly there’s macroeconomic headwinds that are weighing on some of our more recent vintages, particularly the 2022s and early 2023 vintages. Inflation and raising interest rates are the headwinds that make affordability an issue for our customers. That’s -- but we must consider that that’s balanced out with the fact that there’s been no recession yet. Most talking heads believe that there’s not going to be a recession, and if there is one, it’s going to be very soft and short, and equally, if not more important, the unemployment rate still hovers in the mid-3s, which is well below the target 5s, which is one of the key economic metrics that we monitor for the success of our business. So we’re looking good there. For the quarter, DQ delinquencies, including repossession inventory, ended at 13.31% of the total portfolio, as compared to 10.85% in the same quarter in 2022. Annualized net charge-offs for the quarter were 6.86% of the portfolio, as compared to 4.93% in the same quarter of 2022. Extensions were up slightly, but still at average over the course of the last five years and repossessions were actually down quarter-over-quarter. On the recovery front, we -- which helps offset our losses, we’re happy to report that recoveries are stabilizing in the low 40s, which is up from the low 30s, which we experienced earlier this year. That’s something that we don’t control, that we’re seeing is coming our way to help our performance going forward. So while our portfolio performance has ticked up overall in Q3, we are taking solace in the fact that, at least from what we’ve heard in the market from investors, from bankers, that we are outperforming our competitors in this space. In the quarter, we also continue to employ several unique strategic changes to improve performance, especially on collection tactics. We were successful in hiring 96 new collectors over the last 10 months to lower our accounts per collector by over 100. This allows more in-depth collection tactics, such as skip tracing and talk-offs, and we believe that this is improving our performance the last couple of months and going forward. We also built up our near-shore collection program to focus on potential DQ accounts, reduce the roll rate and increase the use of our power dialer. So it’s all hands on deck on servicing to collect the 2022 and early 2023 vintages. One last thing, in the quarter we launched our Gen 8 Originations Model. This model is a complete refresh of our Gen 7 Model that launched in 2021. We try to refresh these models every 18 months to 24 months, so we hit our target on implementing the Gen 8 Model. This model utilizes machine learning AI on our most recent originations to better score applicants. It’s infused with updated alternative data, and importantly, some new fraud scores to reduce fraud. We believe that this is our best buy box yet and we also believe that it should improve performance going forward. So, with that, I’ll kick it back to Brad.