Thanks, David. Since mid-2022, we've taken decisive action to re-engineering our cost structure, reduce our cash burn, and accelerate our path to profitability, this continued in the third quarter. In late August, we subleased our New York City headquarters starting on October 1st. We expect this to reduce net rent expense by approximately $750,000 per quarter, starting in the fourth quarter of 2023. In the first quarter of 2024, we plan to exit the space entirely and move to a smaller floor plan in New York as we maintain our hybrid work approach. As a result of our cost savings actions, we've expanded gross margins from the high 60% range to the low 70s and reduced total operating expenses from 20% from $25.3 million a year ago to $20.4 million in the third quarter. With the successful sublease, we have completed the major restructuring actions we identified earlier this year. While these have been executed, we will remain vigilant around expense management, for example, renegotiating contracts as they expire tightly managing our performance marketing efficiencies and remaining disciplined on headcount. Given the operating margin leverage in our two-sided marketplace business model, we expect revenue growth to be the primary driver of margin expansion from here. As such, our focus is on shepherding our existing resources to re-accelerate growth. When luxury home good demand rebounds, we expect to be able to layer on meaningful incremental GMV and revenue without proportionally increasing operating expenses. Turning to the third quarter results, we delivered GMV and revenue at the midpoint of guidance and adjusted EBITDA margins above the high-end, GMV was $89 million down 10% due to soft demand for luxury home goods and discretionary items. On a sequential basis, GMV growth rates improved 4 percentage points. During the quarter, we saw a change in conversion funnel dynamics. Traffic was the primary driver of order softness in contrast to recent quarters where conversion was the main headwind, while traffic growth slowed as we pulled back on performance marketing spending, the conversion headwind moderated for the fifth consecutive quarter helped by gains in returning by our conversion, which was the highest since late 2021. Average order value of approximately $2,850 was up modestly held by strength in orders over $100,000. As a reminder, we don't manage the business to the specific average order value number, and this metric is sensitive to fluctuations in high-value orders. Median order value, which is less sensitive to high-value orders, was down to modest 3% to approximately $1,200. Additionally, orders under $1,000 accounted for 45% of total orders in the quarter up from 44% a year ago. We believe these trends signify consumer hesitancy around discretionary categories and big-ticket purchases in the current economic environment. Consumer and trade GMV growth rates both improve sequentially. We heard similar feedback in the third quarter, as in the second quarter from the trade. That is while clients are pulling back slightly due the economic uncertainty and rising costs, designers are still actively working on projects with more in the pipeline. Turning to verticals, out-of-home categories, fashion and jewelry were the top performers. With contrast, vintage and antique and new and custom furniture, the verticals most levered to the luxury real estate market declined more than the company average. These two verticals accounted for approximately 60% of GMV in the quarter. We ended the quarter with approximately 63,200 active buyers down 7%. We expect this metric to remain choppy near term as we managed through a period of soft demand. On the supply side of the marketplace, we closed the quarter with over 9,100 seller accounts up over 30%. Additionally, there are now over 1.7 million listings on the marketplace, up 16%. Turning to the P&L, net revenue was $20.7 million down 9%. Transaction revenue, which is tied directly to GMV was roughly 70% of revenue with subscriptions making up most of the remainder. Take rates improve modestly due in part to growing GMV contribution from essential sellers, which carry a higher commission rate. Gross profit was $15.2 million down 2%. Gross profit margins were 73% up from 68% a year ago, primarily driven by lower operational headcount-related expenses as a result of our restructuring initiatives and lower shipping expenses. Sales and marketing expenses were $8.4 million down 24% driven by lower headcount-related expenses as a result of our restructuring initiatives and lower performance marketing spend. Sales and marketing as a percentage of revenue was 41% down from 49% a year ago. Technology development expenses were $4.5 million down 29% driven by lower headcount-related costs. As a result of our restructuring initiatives as a percentage of revenue, technology development was 22% down from 28%. General administrative expenses were $6.8 million up 1% with higher headcount-related costs being offset by lower insurance costs. As a percentage of revenue, general administrative expenses were 33% up from 30%. Lastly, provision for transaction losses were $700,000, 3% of revenue down from 5% due to a decrease in GMV and a decrease in damage claims. In summary, total operating expenses were $20.4 million down 20% reflecting the benefits of our restructuring actions. Adjusted EBITDA loss was $1.8 million compared to a loss of $5.5 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA margin was a loss of 9% versus a loss of 24% last year due to savings from restructuring partially offset by lower revenue. These results reflect the actions we've taken over the past year to re-engineer our cost base. Moving onto the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with a strong cash, cash equivalence, and short-term investments position of $143 million. Additionally, interest income increased to approximately $1.8 million up from approximately $520,000 a year ago. During the quarter, we repurchased $1.4 million of shares under our $20 million board-authorized repurchase program. Turning to the outlook, our guidance reflects our quarter-to-date results, and our forecast for the remainder of the period. We forecast fourth quarter GMV of $83 million to $90 million, down 20% to 13%. Net revenue up $19.7 million to $20.8 million, down 14% to 9%, and adjusted EBITDA margin loss of minus 13% to minus 8%. Our GMV guidance reflect, continue macroeconomic headwinds, including shifting consumer behavior, ongoing economic and geopolitical uncertainty, and softness in the luxury housing market. Going deeper, we typically expect to see month-over-month GMV improvements in October versus September. However, we did not see the sequential growth in October, 2023. This has moderated our expectations for fourth quarter growth. Turning to adjusted EBITDA margins, guidance reflects negative operating leverage from lower revenue, gross margins in the range of 71% to 72%, and that on a sequential basis, we expect operating expenses will be down slightly with savings from our New York City office sublease being partially offset by a sequential increase in performance marketing due to typical holiday marketing campaigns and a sequential increase in product and engineering headcount due to selective hiring around machine learning. In summary, since mid-2022, we have undertaken significant efforts to re-engineer our cost structure and streamline operations. These actions included significantly decreasing employee headcount through reductions in September, 2022 and June 2023, coupled with limiting backfills for attrition, restricting hiring to critical roles, and drastically reducing the number of open positions, revamping our operations team to improve gross margins, pulling back on performance marketing by increasing our efficiency thresholds, streamlining our business, and strengthening our balance sheet by divesting design manager, renegotiating vendor and software contracts, and rationalizing our New York City real estate footprint. The results of these efforts were on display in the third quarter with the operating expenses down 20% year-over-year gross margins expanding and our best quarter-to-date for adjusted EBITDA margins, as a public company. Our challenge remains clear, we're managing through a period of soft demand and limited visibility, balance sheet strength and durable competitive advantages like unique supply are trusted brand strong SEO domain authority and a high organic traffic mix will help us to navigate these headwinds. Thank you for your time. And now I'll turn the call over to the operator to take your questions.