Thank you, Tom, and welcome to our third quarter earnings call. For the remainder of the call, including guidance other than revenue, cash flow, CapEx and net interest and other expense, I will reference adjusted metrics, which exclude stock-based compensation and restructuring charges. As Tom noted our third quarter results were at the upper end of the guidance ranges we provided in our last quarterly update. Third quarter revenue grew sequentially to approximately $1.852 billion, a decrease of 11% year-over-year. These results included approximately $23 million of revenue related to customers' adjustments to their near-term volume requirements. We shipped approximately 575,000 300-millimeter equivalent wafers in the quarter, a 10% decrease from the prior year period. ASP or average selling price per wafer, declined approximately 2% year-over-year mainly driven by changes in the product mix shift during the quarter. Despite the modest decline in ASPs during the quarter, we expect that the pricing environment will remain stable through the end of 2023 and we believe that ASPs for the full year will be roughly flat to slightly up compared to 2022. Wafer revenue from our end markets accounted for approximately 89% of total revenue. Non-wafer revenue, which excludes revenue from reticles, nonrecurring engineering, expedite fees and other items, accounted for approximately 11% of total revenue for the third quarter. Let me now provide an update on our revenues by end markets. Smart mobile devices, represented approximately 42% of the quarter's total revenue. Third quarter revenue decreased approximately 1% sequentially and decreased roughly 18% from the prior year period, principally driven by ongoing weakness in the demand environment and a continuation of the well-publicized inventory correction within the broader smart mobile market. Despite these reduced volumes, ASP and mix improved year-over-year as we continue to remix to the premium end of the smartphone market. We expect the pricing benefits associated with these mix improvements, to be higher for the full year as compared to 2022. During the third quarter, shipment volumes decreased sequentially which was primarily due to the excess channel inventory. However, we continued to see healthy demand during the quarter for our RF transceiver solutions into premium tier handsets. As Tom noted in his prepared remarks, we believe that inventory levels across smart mobile devices will remain elevated going into the year-end, as the rate and pace of demand growth is slower than previously anticipated. In the third quarter, revenue for the home and industrial IoT markets represented approximately 20% of the quarter's total revenue. Third quarter revenue increased approximately 4% sequentially and declined 7% from the year prior period. The consumer-centric portion of our IoT end market, primarily contributed to the year-over-year declines as well as modest declines in ASP and mix within the quarter. For the full year, we expect that ASPs within home and industrial IoT will be roughly flat compared to the prior year. We continue to see stable demand within our home and industrial IoT segment, which is helping to offset some of the weakness in the consumer-centric portions of the portfolio. The demand for our smart card technology grew again in the third quarter as the confluence of speed, convenience and transaction integrity are enabling applications to expand beyond digital payments and into areas such as transportation, government, health, security and access control. As Tom noted in his prepared remarks, aerospace and defense is a segment of growing importance within IoT where we continue to grow design wins and establish new partnerships to deliver best-in-class semiconductor manufacturing security and traceability. As a result, we expect increasing near-term customer demand for our next-generation analog and mixed-signal technologies into these end markets to largely offset the current inventory correction and market softness in the more consumer-centric portions of the IoT market. Automotive continues to be a stable growth segment for us and represented approximately 17% of the quarter's total revenue. Third quarter revenue increased approximately 24% sequentially and roughly 219% from the year prior period, driven by healthy growth in volumes, ASP, and mix as we have continued to ramp production across automotive processing, sensing, vehicle infrastructure, and safety applications. The pricing environment within automotive remains highly constructive as the silicon content functionality and applications across ICE and ACE vehicle architecture continue to grow year-over-year. As part of our discussions with customers, supply chain certainty continues to be a key consideration for existing and future designs and GF is uniquely positioned to meet these needs by investing in capacity across our globally diverse manufacturing footprint. As Tom noted, our automotive business is on track to deliver approximately $1 billion of revenue in 2023, consistent with what we communicated at the start of the year. Next, moving to our communications infrastructure and data center end market, which represented approximately 8% of the quarter's total revenue. Third quarter revenue declined approximately 26% sequentially and roughly 58% year-over-year as a result of declining volumes and the key drivers outlined by Tom in his prepared remarks. As noted during our second quarter update, we expect to see a decline in revenues for this end market through the end of 2023 and as mentioned by Tom, we will continue to allocate manufacturing capacity into more durable and accretive markets such as automotive and premium smart mobile applications. Finally, our personal computing end market represented approximately 2% of the quarter's total revenue. Third quarter revenue declined approximately 29% sequentially and 23% year-over-year, principally driven by declining volume in this segment. Although we anticipate a sequential increase in PC end market revenue in the fourth quarter, we still expect this end market to remain at approximately 3% of total 2023 revenue. Moving next to gross profit. For the third quarter, we delivered gross profit of $541 million, which was at the high end of our guided range and translates into approximately 29.2% gross margin. Gross margin exceeded the guidance range indicated, and as Tom alluded to in his prepared remarks, includes manufacturing cost efficiencies and revenue associated with the successful resolution of customer volume adjustments. Looking ahead to the fourth quarter, we expect some of these benefits to subside and this has been reflected in our fourth quarter guidance. Operating expenses for the third quarter represented approximately 12% of total revenue. R&D for the quarter was roughly flat at $101 million and SG&A increased sequentially to $118 million. Total operating expenses increased sequentially to $219 million in the quarter. We expect total operating expenses to decline in the fourth quarter and included in our guidance is the expectation that we will receive approximately $30 million of benefit related to the advanced manufacturing and investment tax credit. As we continue to spend on qualifying US expenses and capitalized assets in 2024 and beyond, we expect to continue to receive these benefits through the life of the program. We delivered operating profit of $322 million for the quarter, which translates into an approximately 17.4% operating margin, which was above the high end of our guided range and 140 bps below the prior year period. Third quarter net interest and other expense was $18 million and we incurred a tax benefit of $4 million in the quarter. Our third quarter net income increased sequentially to approximately $308 million, but represented a decrease of approximately $60 million from the year-ago period. As a result, we reported a sequential increase in diluted earnings of $0.55 per share for the third quarter. Let me now provide some key balance sheet and cash flow metrics. Cash flow from operations for the third quarter was $416 million. CapEx for the quarter was $323 million or roughly 17% of revenue. Free cash flow for the quarter, which we define as net cash provided by operating activities, less purchases of property plant equipment and intangible assets as set out on the statement of cash flows was $93 million. At the end of the third quarter, our combined total of cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities stood at approximately $3.36 billion. We also have a $1 billion revolving credit facility which remains undrawn. Next, let me provide you with our outlook for the fourth quarter. We expect total GF revenue to be between $1.825 billion and $1.875 billion. Of this, we expect non-wafer revenue to be approximately 11% of total revenue. We expect gross profit to be between $502 million and $544 million. We expect operating profit to be between $327 million and $389 million. Excluding share-based compensation, but including the benefit related to the advanced manufacturing investment tax credit, for the fourth quarter, we expect total OpEx to be between $155 million and $175 million. At the midpoint of our guidance, we expect share-based compensation to be approximately $45 million of which roughly $14 million is related to cost of goods sold and approximately $31 million is related to OpEx. We expect net interest and other expense for the quarter to be between $7 million and $13 million and tax expense to be between $18 million and $24 million. We expect net income to be between $296 million and $358 million. On a fully diluted share count of approximately 557 million shares, we expect adjusted earnings per share for the fourth quarter to be between $0.53 and $0.64. Consistent with our commentary in August, our fourth quarter guidance reflects the expectation that utilization will be in the low to mid-80s for the full year of 2023 due to prevailing demand environment and elevated inventory levels that Tom outlined earlier. As we discussed in our second quarter update for the full year of 2023, we now expect CapEx to be approximately $2 billion. As Tom noted in his prepared remarks, we remain on track to meet the capacity footprint aspirations that we set out in our strategic objectives and based upon our CapEx commitments. As part of our fourth quarter results, we will provide more specific guidance on our CapEx targets for 2024. However, we anticipate a material year-over-year reduction in CapEx as we focus on delivering significant year-over-year free cash flow generation. In summary, consistent operational performance from our dedicated employees across the world and continued efforts to expand our differentiated product offerings in key growth segments enabled us to achieve third quarter results at the high end of the guidance ranges we provided in our second quarter earnings update. We remain acutely focused on the fourth quarter and year-over-year demand outlook heading into 2024, as well as positioning GF for long-term growth opportunities. With that, let's open the call for Q&A. Operator?