Thanks, Raul, and good afternoon, everyone. As Raul mentioned, you can see on Slide 6 that we had a strong fourth quarter in which we met or exceeded the guidance expectations that we set. We're confident that Oportun is poised to carry this momentum into 2025 by further enhancing our profitability, including by being GAAP profitable on a full year basis, as we track towards our long-term financial objectives. As shown on Slide 7, Oportun delivered total revenue of $251 million in the fourth quarter. We were GAAP profitable at $9 million of net income with diluted EPS of $0.20, and we were profitable on an adjusted basis for the fourth consecutive quarter with adjusted net income of $21.5 million, for adjusted EPS of $0.49. While maintaining credit discipline, originations of $522 million were up 19% year-over-year. Sequentially, originations were up 9%, aligning with the typical seasonal pattern for a ramp throughout the year. Total revenue of $251 million exceeded the top end of our guidance by $1 million and declined by 4% year-over-year, due to a decline in average daily principal balance in our personal loans portfolio as a result of prior credit tightening actions. This impact was partially offset by a 155 basis points increase in portfolio yield to 34.2%. Given the successful completion of the sale of our credit card portfolio in mid-November, it's important to keep in mind that while the sale was accretive to the bottom line, our credit card business contributed $4 million of total revenue for 4Q 2024 and $34 million for the full year. Our total net decrease in fair value of $84 million was primarily driven by current period charge-offs of $80 million, which improved 12% year-over-year. Q4 interest expense of $74 million was up $22 million year-over-year, primarily due to a one-time $17 million non-cash write-off of deferred financing costs related to the repayment of our prior corporate financing facility as part of the November refinancing. This amount was slightly below the $18 million estimate I indicated on our third quarter earnings call. Net revenue was $93 million, up 30% year-over-year, as lower net charge-offs and lower non-cash fair value marks on our asset backed notes more than offset lower total revenue and higher interest expense. Excluding the one-time, non-cash write-off of $17 million of deferred financing fees included in interest expense that I mentioned a moment ago, net revenue would have been $110 million, up 53% year-over-year. As a reminder, we elected to stop fair valuing new debt financings in 2023, and we expect the fair value impact to be minimal after this year as prior financings approach maturity. Turning now to operating expenses and efficiency, our $89 million in total operating expenses in Q4 reflected a 31% reduction from the prior-year period. I'd note that this figure includes approximately $6 million in one-time benefits, including those related to capitalization of previously accrued expenses associated with our debt refinancing, true-ups related to estimated costs of exiting the credit card product, and other benefits that we wouldn't expect to occur as part of a normalized run rate. Without the benefit of these one-time items, our 4Q 2024 operating expense would have been approximately $95 million, still below our $97.5 million target. Accordingly, expect $97.5 million in quarterly operating expenses during 2025, reflecting our $95 million exit rate plus a modest increased investment in marketing to drive originations growth. Adjusted net income was $22 million, a $30 million improvement compared to the prior-year quarter, while adjusted EPS of $0.49 was an increase of $0.70 versus last year. The improvement was principally driven by our sharply reduced cost structure, along with higher net revenue. Adjusted EBITDA, which excludes the impact of fair value mark-to-market adjustments on our loan portfolio and notes, was $41 million in the fourth quarter. This reflected a year-over-year increase of $31 million, or 315%, driven by our sharply reduced cost structure along with lower net charge-offs. I'm pleased that our adjusted EBITDA margin increased year-over-year by 12.6 percentage points from 3.8% to 16.3%. Our adjusted EBITDA performance exceeded the high end of our guidance by $11 million, primarily on lower than anticipated operating expenses and net charge-offs. Let me now shift to more details on our strong Q4 credit performance, another testament to the significant progress that we've made. Our front book of loans, originated since July 2022, continues to perform quite well, while our back book of pre-July 2022 loans continues to roll off. As you can see on Slide 8 of our earnings presentation, our more recent credit vintages have outperformed their predecessors and, as a result, the losses on our front book 12-plus months after disbursement are now running up to 500 basis points lower than losses on our back-book, whereas previously we had seen a 400 basis point improvement. This improvement is driven by our continued fine tuning of our credit model. Furthermore, you can see our annualized net charge-off rate for the quarter by front-book versus back-book on Slide 9. In Q4, the front book had an annualized net charge-off rate of 10.5%, which is within the 9% to 11% net charge-off range that we are targeting in our unit economics model. Importantly, back book continues to decline, and as of the end of 2024, it was only 5% of our year-end loan portfolio, but 18% of gross charge-offs. As Raul mentioned, we expect the back book to further diminish to 1% of our portfolio at the end of 2025. Finally, as you can see on Slide 10, our net charge-off rate of 11.7% in 4Q 2024 improved 55 basis points compared to last year and was our lowest rate since 3Q 2022. So in summary, we continue to feel very good about the quality of the credit we are originating. As shown on Slide 13, I'm also confident in the stability of our hardworking members, an outcome driven by our credit underwriting model, which actively seeks to identify people with strong stability in their communities. Prior to approving a loan to a new or existing borrower, we verify employment for all borrowers, who for fourth quarter originations had a median gross income of approximately $50,000. Additionally, our borrowers had an average of 5.7 years at their current job and 6.4 years at their current residence. Moreover, 91% of our approved members had their loan proceeds disbursed to their U.S. bank accounts, rather than opting to receive disbursements in the form of a check. Regarding our capital and liquidity, as shown on Slide 14, we de-leveraged by reducing our debt-to-equity ratio from 8.7x to 7.9x quarter-over-quarter, as we were GAAP profitable and utilized part of the $91 million of our operating cash flow to reduce debt outstanding by $49 million. As of December 31, total cash was $215 million, of which $60 million was unrestricted and $155 million was restricted. Further bolstering our liquidity was $227 million in available funding capacity under our warehouse lines and remaining whole loan sale agreement capacity of $45 million. Following the fourth quarter in January, we issued $425 million in ABS notes, which freed up $438 million in warehouse capacity for future originations. The transaction was a significant success, being over 7x oversubscribed and pricing at a 6.95% weighted average yield, 127 basis points lower than our previous August 2024 transaction. Our access to capital markets is well established. Since June of 2023, Oportun has raised approximately $2.8 billion in diversified financings, including whole loan sales, securitizations and warehouse agreements from fixed income investors and banks. We anticipate we will come to market a few more times this year with ABS deals. Turning now to our guidance as shown on Slide 15, our outlook for the first quarter is: Total revenue of $225 million to $230 million, annualized net charge-off rate of 12.30% plus or minus 15 basis points, adjusted EBITDA of $18 million to $22 million. On a year-over-year basis, our Q1 guidance reflects, a 9% decline in total revenue, largely due to the absence of $12 million of revenue we generated from the credit card portfolio in the prior-year quarter. Excluding credit card revenue, our 1Q guidance reflects only a 5% decline on an organic basis; and an approximately 7% year-over-year decline in the average daily portfolio balance. Despite the revenue decline, our 1Q 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance at the mid-point of $20 million highlights our continued focus on operating expense management, and is an $18 million improvement over 1Q 2024's $2 million. We expect 1Q 2025's annualized net charge-off rate at the mid-point of our guidance to increase by about 30 basis points year-over-year. However, as you can see on the bottom of Slide 16, we expect 1Q 2025 dollar net charge-offs to decline in the 4% range. And if 1Q 2025's average daily portfolio balance were to remain flat year-over-year rather than decline by 7%, the 1Q 2025 annualized net charge-off rate would be approximately 80 basis points lower at 11.5%. We expect the elevated net charge-off rate in 1Q 2025 to be temporary. As you will see from the full year guidance for net charge-offs that I will share with you in a moment, we expect the average annualized net charge-off rate for Q2 through Q4 to be 11.2%. Our guidance for the full year is: total revenue of $945 million to $970 million, annualized net charge-off rate of 11.5% plus or minus 50 basis points, adjusted EBITDA of $135 million to $145 million, adjusted net income of $53 million to $63 million, and adjusted EPS of $1.10 to $1.30. Despite our anticipated 3% decline in average daily principal balance and absence of $34 million in credit card revenue, the top end of our full year revenue guidance reflects modest growth over last year's $968 million total revenue, excluding credit card. As Raul mentioned, we anticipate returning to total quarterly revenue growth on a reported basis prior to year-end, and we expect to grow full year 2025 originations in our 10% to 15% target range. The mid-point of our full year 2025 annualized net charge-off rate guidance at 11.5% reflects a 50 basis point reduction from 2024's 12% level and implies ongoing improvement following Q1. As you can see from the bottom of Slide 16, we expect full year 2025 net charge-offs in dollars to decline in the 7% range. Furthermore, were 2025 average daily principal balance to be flat with 2024 rather than to decline by approximately 3% as anticipated, the net charge-off rate would be 30 basis points lower at 11.2%, even closer to our 9% to 11% target range. Our full year 2025 adjusted EPS range is a 7% uplift at the mid-point from the preliminary expectations we first provided in October of last year. I'm pleased that, with full year operating expenses expected to decline in the 5% range, our 2025 adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EPS expectations at the mid-points imply strong year-over-year growth of 33% and 67%, respectively. Next, I'd like to update you on our progress towards our long-term unit economics targets. While our long-term targets are GAAP targets, I'll be using adjusted metric actuals for comparison because they remove non-recurring items and provide a better sense of our future run rate. It's clear on Slide 17 that we've made significant progress in Q4. Adjusted ROE was 25%, which was a 33 percentage point year-over-year improvement. The increase was driven principally by cost reductions, a higher loan yield, and lower net charge-offs. Full year 2024's adjusted ROE was 8%, a 23 percentage point improvement over full year 2023. Although we're pleased that we reached the 20% to 28% adjusted ROE range in the fourth quarter at 25%, it's our objective to attain this level on an annual basis. Slide 18 shows how we will continue to focus on improving our credit performance, reducing expenses as a percentage of owned principal balance, and reducing leverage to drive improvement in shareholder returns. Raul, back over to you.