Thank you, operator, and thanks, everyone, for joining our investor call. Let's dive into the financial performance highlights. In the third quarter, we again generated strong results for shareholders. Our collections were $237 million, up 63% versus 2024. We continue to perform well versus our underwriting expectations. We generated the largest third-quarter deployments in the company's history with $151 million invested, up 22% versus 2024. Our estimated remaining collections were $2.9 billion, up 27% year over year, driven by our continued deployment performance and attractive returns. Revenue for the quarter was $151 million, up 36% versus the prior year period. We delivered a sector-leading cash efficiency of 72.2%, driven in part by strong collections from the Conn's Portfolio purchase, which we completed in the fourth quarter of last year. We generated strong cash flow, with LTM adjusted cash EBITDA of $727 million, which in turn improved our leverage to 1.59 times, a level which positions us well for future growth and creates significant strategic optionality. Adjusted EPS for the quarter was $0.74, and the Board of Directors has declared a common stock dividend of $0.24 per share. Next, on October 28, we completed an amendment of our senior secured revolving credit facility, increasing capital commitments to $1 billion and reducing pricing. This is an important milestone which positions us well for the significant market opportunities ahead, and Christo will provide additional detail on the upside in his prepared remarks. Finally, we are very excited about the previously announced BlueStem portfolio purchase, which we believe solidifies our leadership position as a strategic acquirer of a wide spectrum of dislocated consumer credit assets. We expect the transaction to close later in the fourth quarter, and I'll share additional detail further on in the presentation. Next, I'd like to offer a brief market update and cover some of the macroeconomic indicators to provide better context for why we remain bullish on the investment opportunity for our business. I'll start with delinquency trends, which remain elevated across all non-mortgage consumer asset classes and create favorable portfolio supply trends for our business. An important component to better understand the state of the consumer is the current level of personal savings. During the pandemic, consumers accumulated abnormally high savings as a result of the unprecedented levels of government stimulus. By 2022, the excess savings had been depleted, and in fact, the current level of personal savings at $1.1 trillion is lower than the long-term pre-pandemic average from January 2013 through December 2019, and the reduction in personal savings in real terms is even more substantial when considering inflation. This suggests that consumers have a more limited ability to absorb unanticipated temporary financial hardships, which is an important driver for delinquency and charge-off volumes. Next, regarding the insolvency market, we've seen a well-pronounced increase in the number of insolvencies both in the US and in Canada from the pandemic trough in 2021, which in turn has fueled a resurgence in supply of insolvency portfolios. Insolvency evaluation and servicing requires highly specialized expertise, a robust data set to develop accurate forecasts, and a technologically advanced servicing platform, and we remain one of the very few debt buyers in the US and by far the largest debt buyer in Canada that can take advantage of this opportunity. Finally, this backdrop is also underpinned by a low level of unemployment, which supports the expected liquidation rates on our existing portfolio and gives us confidence in underwriting new purchases. All of these trends point in one direction: elevated levels of consumer delinquencies and charge-offs, which we are seeing across all consumer asset classes, and which we believe create a long runway for a robust portfolio supply over the coming quarters, coupled with continued strong collection performance on the existing book and on any future portfolio purchases. Moving on, I'd like to review in more detail some key performance trends for the quarter. Our collections were $237 million, up 63% year over year, driven by strong deployment growth in 2023 and 2024. The Conn's portfolio purchase represented $50 million of collections for the quarter. Our collection performance continues to reinforce the accuracy of our underwriting models. A key trend in collection performance has been the increase in legal channel collections. Jefferson Capital, Inc. Common Stock utilizes the legal channel in instances where we believe the account holder has the ability but not the willingness to pay. We've achieved a number of important process improvements, specifically in the US, have significantly compressed the timing from placement of the account to filing of the suit, which in turn has accelerated suit volumes. The inventory of suit-eligible accounts has increased given the significant growth in deployments over the past three years. So over time, we expect to see continued growth in legal collections. Our portfolio purchases for the quarter were $151 million, up 22% year over year. Year-to-date deployments were $451 million, up 24% versus the same period in 2024. Returns remain attractive, and we remain confident in the deployment landscape. As of September 30, we had $316 million of deployments locked in through forward flows, which is an important building block of our deployment strategy for the coming quarters. Our estimated remaining collections as of September 30 were $2.9 billion, up 27% year over year, with ERC related to the Conn's portfolio purchase comprising $179 million of the total. Our ERC is relatively short in duration due in part to the lower average account balances in our portfolio, with 61% of our ERC expected to be collected through 2027. We expect to collect $894 million of our September 30 ERC balance during the next twelve months. Based on the average purchase price multiples recorded thus far in 2025, we would need to deploy approximately $456 million globally over the same timeframe to replace this runoff and maintain current ERC levels. I would note that as of September 30, we had $273 million of deployments contracted via forward flows for the next twelve months. Moving on to slide seven, I'd like to review in more detail another core pillar of our business model and a critical building block of our differentiated return profile: our best-in-class operating efficiency. We seek to own the high-value-added aspects of the purchasing and collection process, including proprietary portfolio and consumer payment performance data, advanced analytical and modeling capabilities, certain proprietary technological capabilities, and the collection processes and techniques that we believe create both a competitive advantage for the company as well as a significant barrier to entry. In contrast, we seek to outsource the aspects of the collection value chain that we view as commoditized or operationally intensive and do not produce a competitive advantage, such as running large domestic call centers. We utilize champion-challenger performance measures to allocate portfolio segments to the best servicers, and our internal collection platform is required to compete for market share against our external vendors in both the agency and the legal collection channels. Our mostly variable cost structure provides flexibility to scale deployments depending on market conditions. The benefits of our relentless pursuit of operating efficiency are evident in our efficiency metrics relative to the rest of the sector. As I mentioned, our cash efficiency ratio for the quarter was 72.2%. It was aided by collections on the Conn's portfolio purchase, which carry lower cost to collect, given the significant portion of paying accounts in the Conn's portfolio. When excluding the Conn's portfolio collections and expenses, the cash efficiency ratio would have been 68.8%, which remains materially higher compared to other public companies in the sector. Our leading operational efficiency is a powerful competitive advantage and, coupled with the strong returns on our differentiated investment strategy, supports consistent, attractive shareholder returns. Next, I wanted to provide an update on the previously announced BlueStem portfolio purchase, where we are acquiring a portfolio of credit card assets from affiliates of Bluestem Brands. The portfolio was originated by Bluestem to finance e-commerce purchases of home goods and consumer products and consists of small balance revolving credit card receivables for which new purchases have been suspended. The transaction does not include a back book of charged-off receivables. Similar to the Conn's portfolio purchase, the transaction is structured with a cutoff date, in this case, June 30, 2025. Jefferson Capital, Inc. Common Stock will pay a gross purchase price of $303 million to acquire receivables with a face value of $488 million as of the cutoff date. At closing, the gross purchase price will be adjusted for interim portfolio cash flows net of servicing expense. Assuming, for illustrative purposes, that the deal closes on December 1, we expect the net purchase price to be $195 million, and that number would be lower if the transaction is completed further out. Given the significant portion of paying accounts and the short duration of the assets, we expect the half-life of the ERC to be less than one year. Unlike the Conn's portfolio purchase, Jefferson Capital, Inc. Common Stock is not acquiring any employees or physical facilities. Instead, the portfolio will be serviced by CardWorks Servicing going forward. $20 million of the purchase price will be held in escrow to secure implementation obligations relating to the servicing transfer. Jefferson Capital, Inc. Common Stock does not intend to pursue ongoing originations through the Bluestem platform, and the transaction does not include any Bluestem retail operations or assets. We expect closing in the fourth quarter of this year, subject to customary conditions, including an HSR approval. I believe the Bluestem portfolio purchase positions us well for a wide spectrum of opportunities involving dislocated consumer finance portfolios. A number of nonbank consumer credit originators are facing challenges, and a consumer finance business is one that requires significant scale to support profitability. A portfolio sale is frequently the value-optimizing option, and liquidity upfront is paramount, particularly in any lender-driven processes or where the decision has been made to cease new originations. The potential buyer universe in these situations is limited, given the significant operational complexity, risks of portfolio deterioration related to a servicing transfer, and the potential for disruptions related to that servicing transfer. These opportunities remain episodic in nature, and as such, they require a particular set of circumstances; they are difficult to predict from a timing perspective. As it is not possible for us to induce this type of transaction, Jefferson Capital, Inc. Common Stock remains uniquely positioned to react to these opportunities as they arise. We have specialized capabilities in hard-to-value and hard-to-service asset classes, particularly in small balance portfolios, which have given us an edge in both the Conn's and the Bluestem transactions. These capabilities are hard to replicate as they are underpinned by over two decades of data, coupled with our proprietary analytics. We have the deep operational experience to manage the servicing transfer at close and also to improve servicing efficiency as we manage the portfolio runoff. And finally, we have a low-cost funding structure with ample capital availability, which allows us to offer speed and certainty of close, critical transaction components for the seller in situations where business disruption is rapidly eroding the value of the assets. With that, I'd now like to hand over the call to Christo for a more detailed look at our financial results.