Thanks, Frank. That's a great overview. Before I get to the $200 million investment from Roivant, I'd like to discuss Myasthenia Gravis from both a strategic angle and in terms of execution. Let's start with execution. I believe we are on track to gain alignment on our pivotal MG design with the FDA in Q4 of this calendar year. In fact, we have communicated with FDA regarding a meeting early in Q4 to review modifications to our pivotal Phase III study in MG. These modifications are based on the agency's advice and feedback obtained during our previous end of Phase-II meeting and are also based on our recently communicated program wide review. Contingent upon the FDA feedback we received in Q4, we plan to initiate our study in the early part of 2022, and we're very excited about how this program is shaping up. Gaining alignment with the FDA and getting back into the clinic will be an important catalyst for Immunovant, especially given the remaining opportunity we see for patients and for 1401 based on our understanding of patient needs and 1401's potential. I also think the strategic opportunity for 1401 is underappreciated by the market. Not surprisingly, Immunovant's market research highlights the enthusiasm that neurologists have for the anti-FcRn class generally. The rapid onset of symptom control and the percentage of deep responders have been impressive, especially given that studies reported to-date have involved short term dosing. Recently, our marketing and medical teams dug deeper with patients and with physicians who treat large populations of patients with Myasthenia Gravis. This research highlights something very important, specifically that patients strongly desire to avoid relapse. When patients with Myasthenia Gravis relapse, weakness in symptoms can occasionally get much worse very quickly. Relapse can be a crisis. So patients want study control. At the same time, physicians and patients do desire to minimize immunosuppression in the long run. I think that is why an induction and maintenance approach resonates with clinicians. 1401's broad therapeutic window is very well suited here. Our higher doses achieved the rapid and deep IgG reduction needed to maximize the initial clinical response. Then our broad therapeutic window and convenient subcutaneous dosage form enable us to design a study that steps down IgG suppression to match patient's needs without the PK/PD extremes of cyclic therapy. On June 1st, we disclosed data regarding 1401's broad therapeutic window and the insights gained from the comprehensive program review. I want to emphasize that these insights inform our enthusiasm for the potential of 1401 broadly, not just in MG. Patient needs differ by indication, by severity and by stage of disease, and we believe this variability is best addressed with a therapeutic option that offers a range of treat to target IgG suppression levels. The flexibility in dosing not only enables us to design programs with the ideal level of IgG suppression, but as Frank said, we believe this will also enable us to design dosage regimens where changes in albumin and LDL outside of normal limits will mostly be a short term duration during induction. What we've seen to date is that dose dependent changes in LDL are predictable and reversible. We've also seen that the PK/PD curves for IgG differ from the PK/PD curves for albumin and therefore LDL. Our models predict that as we go from high doses during the induction phase to more modest doses during the maintenance phase, then the albumin and LDL will generally return to values within normal limits, while IgG will remain suppressed at levels that are likely to maintain a clinical response for most patients. I expect our MG protocol and frankly our protocols in many other conditions to be unique and differentiated in this regard. Moving on to another condition, I'd also like to review our approach to Thyroid Eye Disease. As we previously disclosed, we had to prematurely terminate our Phase IIb study of 1401 in moderate to severe TED due to our unanticipated program wide lipid review. Prematurely discontinuing a study is always difficult, especially for patients and investigators. And in this case, more so as only 41 of the projected 77 subjects to be randomized completed the primary efficacy evaluation at week 13, a bit over 50%. Consequently, the question that this study was designed to answer is that whether a 12-week course of 1401 improves proptosis could not be answered with any certainty. What we did observe is that 1401 in a dose-dependent manner decreases total IgG and thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulins. As previously disclosed, on review of the data from the early study visits, when approximately 85% of the enrolled patients were assessed for proptosis response at each visit, it appeared that the 680 milligram dose and possibly the 340 milligram dose could achieve a meaningful separation from placebo. We believe that the 1401 induced declines in total IgG and thyroid stimulating immunogobulins, coupled with the efficacy trends observed at the early visits when most of the enrolled subjects were evaluated for these efficacy parameters, are promising. We've also been following the evolution of the market carefully over the last couple of quarters. Roivant was a very early believer in the potential of Thyroid Eye Disease as an indication, having designed studies as early as 2019. Initial enthusiasm was driven by an understanding that the unmet need is very high and that the addressable population was solidly in the range of other rare diseases. It might surprise people to recall that teprotumumab's Phase II data was originally published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2017. Nevertheless, by 2019, when Roivant was designing the 1401 trial, I don't think the opportunity was fully appreciated. Today, that is certainly no longer the case as teprotumumab's launch is clearly validating the market opportunity. Physicians and patients are enthusiastic about medical therapy for Thyroid Eye Disease, with decreased ocular symptoms and reduced need for surgery. These benefits are great for many patients. However, insulin growth factor also appears to be a pretty foundational pathway across many organ systems. So blocking this pathway may have consequences beyond the extraocular tissue that is the target in Thyroid Eye Disease. I'm aware of a recent study presented at ENDO 2021 virtual conference that reported 65% of patients receiving teprotumumab in a small p series experienced otologic symptoms. Hearing impairment, including deafness, is also reported in the FDA label as having a greater incidence on teprotumumab as compared to placebo. It's early days, so we'll have to see how this all plays out in terms of clinical experience and product labeling. But I do think it highlights an opportunity for a product with a different mechanism of action and a potentially different benefit risk ratio. Another important point regarding Thyroid Eye Disease relates to the market potential that Roivant recognized a couple of years back based on really understanding patient needs. In my experience across a wide range of autoimmune conditions with high unmet need, physicians and patients not only appreciate, but also really need, medications with different mechanisms of action. Given the diversity of individual patients, it's almost inevitable that some patients will respond better to one mechanism and others will respond better to a different mechanism of action. Beyond that, patients who are severely or even moderately impacted, often require sequential therapy with different mechanisms of action to get close to being fully well. Bottom line, I'm really excited about the opportunity for patients and for 1401 in TED. We've also been working on getting the Warm Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia program restarted. We found the data generated prior to the clinical cause to be compelling, albeit on a small data set of only three patients who completed 11 or 12 weeks of therapy. Experts who reviewed our data with us shared with us that spontaneous improvement is uncommon in these patients after failing multiple rounds of steroids and immunosuppressants. In particular, I find our observation that one of the three patients experienced a very strong response and maintained this response throughout the treatment period to be very encouraging. This large improvement in hemoglobin can be achieved with very high dose steroids, but very high dose steroids just aren't a long-term solution. So patients end up tapering down, relapsing or partially relapsing, and then many of them are still getting intermittent blood transfusion. That's certainly not an ideal standard-of-care. I said earlier that I wanted to get back to talking about the importance of Roivant's $200 million direct investment, and this is probably a good point to do that. As Frank mentioned earlier, there are 15 indications being actively studied across the anti-FcRn class, that's remarkable. People are very excited about this class, and I agree with Frank that the right strategy is for ambitious parallel development. We're now well positioned to pursue this strategy. With regard to the time line for providing additional updates, I'll just reiterate that we expect to provide a meaningful update on our MG program by the end of the year, specifically that we've achieved alignment with the FDA. We expect to do the same thing for our TED and WAIHA programs in early 2022. Behind that will be announcements of our new indications later in 2022, once these are ready to go with regulatory alignment. We also plan to hold an R&D Day in the first quarter of 2022, and I'm sure that will be very interesting. In summary, we expect a steady stream of strategic and execution updates that we believe will be very exciting for investors, followed later by data across a wide range of indications. This stream of updates, and even more so the stream of progress in Immunovant's development program, make us very enthusiastic about our prospects. With that, I'll ask the operator to open the line for questions.