Thanks, Scott, and good morning, everyone. I will start on Slide 6, which is a good indicator of the overall health of the market. As Scott mentioned, payment cards issued to consumers continue to grow. The latest figures from Visa and MasterCard show cards in circulation in the U.S. increased at a 10% CAGR for the three years ending June 30, and were up 9% compared with the prior year quarter. Additionally, recent earnings reports from the big U.S. banks also point to healthy card issuance and usage trends with consumers. As a few examples, Chase noted that cards outstanding increased 16% year-over-year in this third quarter, driven by strong account acquisition. Citi's new account acquisitions increased 5%. And Wells Fargo's new account growth increased 22%. So the card issuance to consumer side of the market where banks and other issuers participate has been strong in 2023. But the production side where we participate has been relatively soft. However, if you look at our last two years together, CPI sales are more broadly in line with the issuance trends to consumers. Looking back to 2022, we delivered well above average growth with our Debit and Credit segment increasing 32% and as customers had high demand for cards given the limited supply in the market. As the supply chain stabilized and lead times came down in 2023, in combination with economic uncertainty and banking industry stress, customers have pulled back on ordering this year more than we expected and are targeting lower months of supply for their inventory, resulting in our updated outlook of a mid-single-digit sales decline for the year. Relative to 2021, though, this year's projected sales would still be about 20% higher than the 2021 levels and the combined 2-year trends would be more consistent with the ongoing growth in cards issued to consumers. Long term, we believe growth in consumer issuance, coupled with the recurring nature of the business, in which the significant majority of card issuance relates to existing card replacement and the ongoing trends towards adoption of higher-priced contactless and eco-focus cards, should support strong growth for the company. We don't know exactly when customer spending will normalize, but based on indications from our customers, we believe the market will improve gradually over the course of 2024. We will have more visibility and provide more color on our 2024 expectations when we release our fourth quarter results early next year. But let's return now to our third quarter results on Slide 7. I will provide a few high-level comments, and Jeff will go into more detail in a few minutes. For the quarter, Debit and Credit segment sales declined 16% and prepaid segment sales declined 12%. The prepaid decline can be attributed to timing between quarters as we were only down slightly on a year-to-date basis and still expect the full year sales to be similar to or slightly above last year's levels. In the Debit and Credit segment, the decline was primarily driven by reductions in card volumes as customers continue to be cautious with spending and focused on working down inventory levels. Card volumes declined across eco-focused, contactless and contact cards in the quarter, while services revenue increased slightly, driven by increases in processing fees due to a larger installation base in our Card@Once instant issuance business. Despite the sales decline, we have continued to win new business opportunities that should help us in the future. Not only with secure cards, but in card personalization services, Card@Once and prepaid. From a profitability standpoint, the sales decline in the third quarter negatively impacted operating leverage in our results, leading to net income and adjusted EBITDA margin declines despite reductions in operating expenses. As a result, third quarter net income declined 68% and adjusted EBITDA declined 25% compared to the prior year period. For the first nine months of the year, sales were down slightly with a 2% decline, while net income decreased 12% and adjusted EBITDA declined 1%. Slide 8 shows our revised outlook for the year. Based on recent customer feedback, we expect our overall fourth quarter sales levels to be similar to the third quarter. We had previously expected improvement in the fourth quarter based on customer discussions and quoting activity in the summer. But that demand has not materialized as soon as expected. In addition, the various new sales initiatives we implemented after seeing the market softness earlier in the year, have taken longer to get results than we expected. And consequently, will have minimal impact on this year's results. We expect to see benefit, however, in 2014. This year's fourth quarter also has challenging comparisons as we posted net sales growth of 36% in last year's fourth quarter. We expect declines in the Debit and Credit segment in the fourth quarter due to reduced card volumes, but we do expect prepaid sales to improve. The fourth quarter expectation translates into a full year outlook of mid-single-digit declines for both net sales and adjusted EBITDA. We now expect free cash flow to be approximately double the 2022 level, and a year-end net leverage ratio of approximately 3x which would be consistent with the 2022 year-end ratio. Although the overall 2023 outlook is below our expectations coming into the year, we believe we continue to have a strong position in the U.S. marketplace and should be able to quickly capitalize once customers resume normal purchasing patterns. I will now turn the call over to Jeff to review our third quarter and year-to-date results and outlook in more detail. Jeff?