Thank you, Carrie. Our third quarter performance reflects strong execution and cost discipline while continuing to navigate a challenging housing environment. We delivered $1.4 billion of revenue in the third quarter, exceeding the high-end of our guidance range. On the acquisition side, we purchased 3,504 homes in the third quarter, ahead of our expectations and down 27% sequentially. This decline was a result of our elevated spread levels alongside a pullback in marketing spend beginning in late May as we observed signals that the macro environment was deteriorating, particularly clearance rates, delistings, and monthly home price appreciation. Contribution margin was 3.8% in the third quarter, ahead of the high-end of our guidance range. This performance was aided by slightly higher resale clearance than expected, coupled with a small impact from lower concessions and buyer broker commissions, which are reflected in revenue and direct selling costs, respectively. Adjusted operating expenses totaled $90 million for the quarter, lower than our guidance of $105 million, and down from $100 million in the second quarter of 2024. This outperformance was due to a pullback in advertising spend, which was $15 million in the quarter, coupled with lower than expected fixed and variable expenses as we continue to exercise cost discipline throughout the business. Finally, adjusted EBITDA loss was $38 million, significantly outperforming the high-end of our guidance range due to contribution margin outperformance and ongoing cost discipline. Turning to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $1.2 billion in total capital, which primarily includes $837 million in unrestricted cash and marketable securities, and $218 million of equity invested in homes and related assets. We also had $7 billion in non-recourse asset-backed borrowing capacity, composed of $3 billion of senior revolving credit facilities and $4 billion of senior and mezzanine term debt facilities, of which total committed borrowing capacity was $2.3 billion. As Carrie mentioned, while we started the year off expecting to be operating in a macro neutral environment, what we've witnessed is a housing market that remains under pressure. While mortgage rates fell to two-year lows during the quarter in response to anticipated rate cuts from the Fed, they have since rebounded to over 7%. Homeowners remain locked in to existing low-rate mortgages, and buyer affordability constraints are still prominent. This dynamic has translated into a seasonally adjusted annual sales pace of under 4 million homes. In response, our third quarter spreads were higher than those seen in the third quarter of last year. These actions put pressure on our fourth quarter acquisitions which we expect to be just north of 2,200. As we've previously discussed, during the fourth and first quarters, home price seasonality generally enables us to embed lower spreads into our offers, given these homes will be sold into the spring selling season. While spreads are higher than last year, they are coming down sequentially due to this dynamic. We will continue to acquire homes at spreads we believe are appropriate as we manage our business for growth, margin, and risk. And we will respond to market signals, including potential improvements in clearance rates, delisting rates, and HPA as a result of rate reductions. We expect fourth quarter revenue to be between $925 million and $975 million, contribution profit between $15 million and $25 million, which implies a contribution margin of 1.6% to 2.6%, and adjusted EBITDA loss between $70 million and $60 million. We expect adjusted operating expenses, which we define as the delta between contribution profit and adjusted EBITDA, to be approximately $85 million. Our fourth quarter contribution margin guidance reflects lower home price appreciation during the hold period due to the softer housing environment. Additionally, margins are under pressure due to slower acquisition rates, which lead to a resale mix that favors older, lower margin homes over newer, higher margin homes. To note, the midpoint of our revenue and margin guidance implies a full-year contribution margin of 4.5%, just 50 basis points shy of our annual target margin range while operating in an incredibly difficult housing market environment. We expect to see approximately $50 million in annualized savings from the reduction in force we announced today and an additional $35 million in annualized savings from the separation of Mainstay that we announced in August. The company expects to incur a total of approximately $17 million in restructuring expenses in the fourth quarter related to our reduction in force and other restructuring costs. We are pleased with our third quarter performance and will continue to focus on the things we can control. We are committed to operating as efficiently as possible in order to offer the most attractive offers to our customers while also strengthening our financial performance in service of reaching our breakeven milestone. I'd now like to turn the call over to the operator to open up the line for questions.