Thanks, David. We delivered GMV and revenue above the high end of guidance and adjusted EBITDA margins at the high end of guidance. GM was $91.7 million, down 6%, with growth rates increasing 11 percentage points versus the fourth quarter. On a sequential basis, GMV grew 6%. While we continue to see soft demand for luxury home goods and high-end discretionary items, we believe that the worst of the down cycle for luxury home furnishings is now behind us. During the quarter, traffic and average order value were headwinds to GMV growth, partially offset by conversion gains. This was our second consecutive quarter of conversion improvements. Encouragingly, conversion increased for both new and returning buyers as we see ample headroom to increase both over time. Since mid-2023, we have ramped our A/B testing velocity and launched more product enhancements into production. We believe this is aiding conversion. Consistent with recent trends, average order value was another headwind to GMV growth. Average order value of approximately $2,600 was down 5%. We saw a slight mix shift to orders under $2,000. Additionally, orders over $100,000 accounted for approximately 3% of GMV towards the low end of our historical range of 3% to 5%. In contrast, our median order value of approximately $1,200 was flat. The latter metric is less sensitive to fluctuations in high-value orders. Consumer GMV and trade GMV declined at similar rates. Encouragingly, consumer orders grew for the first time since the third quarter of 2021. Turning to verticals. Jewelry, Art and Vintage and Antique furniture all posted positive order growth. We entered the quarter with approximately 60,700 active buyers, down 9% year-over-year and flat sequentially. Because this is a trailing 12-month metric, we expect it to remain choppy near term. However, we see a return to order growth as a leading indicator of active buyer growth. Based on quarter-to-date trends, we expect order growth to resume in the second quarter. On the supply side of the marketplace, we closed the quarter with over 7,600 unique sellers, up 6%. Additionally, there are now over 1.7 million listings on the marketplace, up 9%. On a sequential basis, we saw a modest decline in the number of unique sellers due to higher-than-usual churn. The majority of it proactive related to recent policy changes. However, this churn had a de minimis impact on GMV or total listings. While we do expect some volatility to unique seller count as we cycle through the introduction of inventory minimums, changes to commissions and the launch of monthly minimum subscription fees, we expect continued listings growth throughout the year. Turning to the P&L. Net revenue was $22.1 million, down 1%. Transaction revenue, which is tied directly to GMV was approximately 75% of revenue with subscriptions making up most of the remainder. Take rates improved modestly due to the combination of several factors, including a higher proportion of orders below our $25,000 commission break, growing GMV contribution from essential sellers, which carry a higher commission rate and a revised commission break structure that went into effect late in the fourth quarter. Gross profit was $16 million, up 7%, growing for the first time since the first quarter of 2022. Gross profit margins were 72%, up approximately 5 percentage points, primarily driven by lower headcount-related expenses as a result of our restructuring initiatives and lower shipping expenses as well as higher take rates. As a reminder, the year ago period includes approximately $500,000 of amortization expense related to discontinued support of our NFT platform. Sales and marketing expenses were $9.2 million, down 6%, driven by lower headcount-related expenses as a result of our restructuring initiatives. Sales and marketing as a percentage of revenue was 42%, down from 44% a year ago. Technology development expenses were $4.7 million, down 18%, driven by lower headcount-related costs as a result of our restructuring initiatives. As a percentage of revenue, technology development was 21%, down from 26%. General and administrative expenses were $7 million, down 13%, driven primarily by savings from lower professional service fees, reducing our New York City real estate footprint and lower insurance rates, partially offset by an increase in headcount-related expenses due to our annual merit cycle in March. As a percentage of revenue, general administrative expenses were 32%, down from 37%. Lastly, provision for transaction losses were approximately $400,000, 2% of revenue, down from 6%, primarily driven by a decrease in damage claims as a result of new policies implemented in partnership with our carriers as well as lower GMV. We continue to manage operating expenses with discipline. Total operating expenses were $21.3 million, down 15%, reflecting the benefits of restructuring. Adjusted EBITDA loss was $1.8 million compared to a loss of $5.3 million last year. Adjusted EBITDA margin was a loss of 8% versus a loss of 24% last year due to savings from restructuring. Moving on to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with a strong cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments position of $134 million. During the quarter, we repurchased $2.9 million of shares under our $20 million board-authorized repurchase program. Since inception in August of 2023, we have repurchased approximately $6.4 million of shares. Before discussing guidance, I'll take a moment to review the progress we've made over the past 2 years in building a stronger financial foundation. First, revenue take rates are higher today versus a year ago due to various monetization initiatives. Second, gross margins have expanded from the high 60s to low 70s on improved operational efficiency. Third, our operating expense run rate is meaningfully lower due to headcount reductions, rationalizing our real estate footprint in New York City, increasing efficiency thresholds for performing marketing spend and other cost savings measures. The net effect of this is that each incremental dollar of GMV that we generate in the future should yield more revenue and flow through at a higher incremental margin. To illustrate the changes, our high watermark for GMV was $117.5 million in the first quarter of 2022. Adjusted EBITDA loss in the first quarter of 2022 was $4.7 million or negative 18% of revenue compared to a loss of $1.8 million or negative 8% in the first quarter of 2024. Notably, this improvement was against a base of GMV and revenue that is 22% and 17% lower, respectively. A point we're stressing is that the majority of our operating expenses, about 2/3 are headcount related. From our new cost base, we expect to be able to add meaningful GMV and revenue without proportionate increases in headcount. Said another way, the changes we made over the past 2 years increased our operating leverage potential. Turning to the outlook. Our guidance reflects quarter-to-date results and our forecast for the remainder of the period. We forecast second quarter GMV of $85 million to $92 million, down 5% to up 2%. Net revenue of $21 million to $22.3 million, flat to up 7% and adjusted EBITDA margin loss of minus 14% to minus 9%. Our GMV guidance reflects moderating year-over-year declines in traffic and AOB and continued conversion improvements, quarter-to-date positive order volume growth and more moderate seasonality as our self-help product initiatives counteract some of the typical second quarter seasonal softness. Our revenue guidance reflects modest take rate expansion due to a number of factors, including updated commission tiers, a higher mix of orders under our commission break, a higher mix of GMV from our essential sellers and instituting a minimum monthly subscription fee for new sellers. Lastly, adjusted EBITDA margin guidance reflects gross margins in the range of 71% to 73%. And then on a sequential basis, we expect operating expenses to increase modestly due to higher headcount expenses from a full quarter of our annual merit cycle in March and backfilling open roles. However, we are expecting minimal net headcount growth in 2024. Over the past 2 years, we have made difficult decisions to reengineer our cost structure and reevaluate our priorities. The positive trends that we are witnessing indicate that our strategy is working. The first quarter represented our second consecutive quarter of conversion rate increases, a return to gross profit growth and our third consecutive quarter of meaningful year-over-year adjusted EBITDA margin improvement. Additionally, order growth improved 11 percentage points from the fourth quarter to flat and active buyers stabilized. Furthermore, at the midpoint of guidance, we anticipate a return to order growth and revenue growth in the second quarter, helped by continued conversion improvements. While much has changed in our business and our market throughout the past 2 years, our financial goals have not, over time, our objective remains to deliver sustainable revenue growth, expand margins, become profitable and ultimately grow free cash flow per share. We look to build on the first quarter's progress as we move throughout the year. Thank you for your time. I will now turn the call over to the operator to take your questions.