Thanks, Raul, and good afternoon, everyone. As you can see on Slide 5, we had a strong first quarter exceeding the high end of our total revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance while coming in at the favorable end of our annualized net charge-off rate guidance. As shown on Slide 6, we delivered total revenue of $236 million in the first quarter. We were GAAP profitable for the second consecutive quarter with $9.8 million of net income and diluted EPS of $0.21. We were also profitable on an adjusted basis for the fifth consecutive quarter with adjusted Net Income of $18.6 million and an adjusted EPS of $0.40. While maintaining credit discipline, originations of $469 million were up 39% year-over-year which, as Raul mentioned, reflected an unusually low baseline in Q4 '24. Sequentially, originations were down 10% from Q4's $522 million, consistent with the typical seasonality we've observed in prior years. Total revenue of $236 million declined by $15 million or 6% year-over-year. This decline was primarily due to the absence of $11 million of credit card revenue in the prior year quarter. As a reminder, we completed the sale of our credit card portfolio in November of last year, which was accretive to our bottom line. Our total net decrease in fair value of $73 million was primarily driven by current period net charge-offs of $81 million. Furthermore, higher yielding assets drove a favorable $12 million mark-to-market adjustment on our loan portfolio. First quarter interest expense of $57 million was up $3 million year-over-year as sub-3% pandemic era ABS issuances continued to pay down. Net revenue was $106 million, up 34% year-over-year, as lower fair value marks and lower net charge-offs more than offset lower total revenue and higher interest expense. As a reminder, we elected to stop accounting for new debt financings using the fair value method in 2023 and as a result we expect the fair value impact on our asset-backed notes to be minimal after this year as prior financings approach maturity. Operating expenses of $93 million, down 15% from the prior year, reflecting our ongoing cost discipline. As Raul mentioned, we continue to expect full year 2025 operating expenses of approximately $390 million averaging $97.5 million a quarter for a 5% reduction from 2024. Adjusted EBITDA, which excludes the impact of fair value mark-to-market adjustments on our loan portfolio and notes, was $34 million in the first quarter. This reflected a significant year-over-year increase of $32 million driven by cost reductions and credit performance improvement. As a result, our adjusted EBITDA margin increased year-over-year by 13.4 percentage points from 0.8% to 14.2%. Adjusted net income increased to $19 million, an improvement of $15 million from last year principally driven by our reduced operating expenses along with improved credit performance. Adjusted EPS increased year-over-year from $0.09 to $0.40. Next I'd like to provide some additional color on our strong Q1 credit performance. 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 7, our more recent credit vintages have generally outperformed their predecessors and, as a result, the losses on our front book 12 months after disbursement are now generally running approximately 600 basis points lower than our back book. Furthermore, you can see our annualized net charge-off rate for the quarter by front book versus back book on Slide 8. In Q1, the front book had an annualized net charge-off rate of 11.5%, near the 9% to 11% net charge-off range that we target in our unit economics model. The back book continues to decline representing just 4% of the loan portfolio at quarter-end, but accounting for 14% of gross charge-offs. We expect the back book to further diminish to 1% of our portfolio by the end of 2025. Finally, as you can see on Slide 9, our net charge-off rate was 12.2% in the first quarter, which was at the low end of guidance. Our Q1 net charge-off dollars declined by 5% while we reduced our 30-plus day delinquency rate by 56 basis points, which bodes well for future credit performance. So in summary, we continue to feel good about the quality of the credit we are originating. Regarding our capital and liquidity: as shown on Slide 11, we deleveraged by reducing our debt-to-equity ratio from 7.9x to 7.6x quarter-over-quarter supported by GAAP profitability and $101 million in operating cash flow, of which $29 million was used to pay down debt. We've now reduced leverage meaningfully from 3Q '24's peak level of 8.7x. In late April and following the close of the first quarter, we fully satisfied the $12.5 million in mandatory payments due by July 31 on our corporate debt facility, completing the payments three months ahead of schedule. Consequently, Oportun has no further mandatory corporate debt repayment obligations during the remainder of 2025. As of March 31, total cash was $231 million, of which $79 million was unrestricted and $152 million was restricted. Further bolstering our liquidity was $317 million in available funding capacity under our warehouse lines. Our continued access to the capital markets is well established. Since June 2023, Oportun has raised approximately $3 billion in diversified financings, including whole loan sales, securitizations and warehouse facilities from fixed income investors and banks. The Company maintains an exemplary record in the ABS market having completed 24 transactions and issued $6.3 billion in notes to date from the Oportun shelf. As a reminder, in January we issued $425 million in ABS notes, which freed up warehouse capacity for future originations. The transaction was a significant success oversubscribed by more than 7x and pricing at a 6.95% weighted average yield, 127 basis points lower than our previous transaction in August 2024. We also closed on a two-year $187.5 million committed warehouse facility in April. This transaction increased our total committed warehouse capacity to $954 million with a diversified group of lenders and our available funding capacity at the end of April was $417 million. Turning now to our guidance as shown on Slide 12. Our outlook for the second quarter is total revenue of $237 million to $242 million, annualized net charge-off rate of 11.9% plus or minus 15 basis points and adjusted EBITDA of $29 million to $34 million. Our Q2 total revenue guidance reflects a 4% year-over-year decline at the midpoint, which is almost entirely due to the absence of the prior year's credit card revenue. Our Q2 adjusted EBITDA guidance of $32 million at the midpoint reflects disciplined expense management and growth over 2Q '24's level of $30 million. We expect our Q2 annualized net charge-off rate to be 11.9% at the midpoint of guidance, down approximately 40 basis points year-over-year. We are reiterating all aspects of our full year 2025 guidance, including: 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. Our full year guidance reflects our first quarter performance, the uncertain macroeconomic environment and a slight tapering of our full year originations growth expectation from our prior 10% to 15% range to around 10%. Before I turn it back to Raul, 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 metrics for comparison because they remove nonrecurring items and provide a better sense of our future run rate. It's clear on Slide 14 that we continued to make significant progress in Q1. Adjusted ROE was 21%, which was a 17 percentage point year-over-year improvement. The increase was driven principally by cost reductions, improved credit performance and a higher loan yield. Our north star continues to be delivering GAAP ROEs of 20% to 28% annually driven by reduced annualized net charge-offs to 9% to 11%, lowering operating expenses to 12.5% of our owned portfolio and attaining annual growth of 10% to 15% in our owned loan portfolio. We also intend to return to our 6:1 debt-to-equity leverage ratio over the longer term by reducing our corporate debt outstanding and continuing to increase our GAAP profitability. Raul, back over to you.