Thank you, Tom, and good morning, everyone. As I review the third quarter results, please refer to the supplemental slides or the MD&A for further details. Our MD&A is included in the Form 10-Q that was filed with the SEC this morning and provides a discussion of our comparative third quarter results. A link to that filing can also be found on our website. Consistent with the first half of this year, our financial performance in the third quarter was driven by the diverse mix of our business segments along with the continued strong growth in our higher margin operating segments with almost 59% of our adjusted gross profit coming from our B2B and enterprise segments. The highly recurring nature of our business model also remains strong with 60% of adjusted gross profit in Q3 coming from monthly fees or revenues that are not dependent on transactions or bank card volume. Staying on gross profit for a minute and to expand on Tom's comment regarding adjusted gross profit margins, the 40 basis point year-over-year decline in adjusted gross profit margins was driven by the mid-quarter acquisition of Plastiq in Q3 of last year. If you exclude that impact, adjusted gross profit margins increased 16 basis points on a year-over-year basis. If you look at the trend since Q4 of 2023, which was our first full quarter of ownership of Plastiq, we've expanded adjusted gross profit margins by a total of 130 basis points with sequential improvement each quarter as a result of strong operating leverage. We believe our organic growth rates also continue to outperform our industry peers. If you adjust for the impact of Plastiq, which had one month that was not part of our financial results in Q3 of last year, Priority had year-over-year organic growth of 16.8% for revenue, 17.3% for adjusted gross profit, and 18.6% for adjusted EBITDA. When you combine industry-leading growth rates with our highly recurring gross profit and the differentiated technology platform in the Priority commerce engine, hopefully you can understand why we're excited about our business and the value that has been built that Priority. I'll now move to Slide 9 in the segment level results for SMB, which generated Q3 revenue of $158.8 million, that is $18.5 million or 13.2% higher than the prior year's third quarter. For comparison purposes, if you recall our Q2 commentary, we referenced organic growth at 12.2% for SMB, excluding the impact of a certain large reseller. Now that we've lapped the impact of that large reseller, our reported quarterly results show the ability to consistently and organically grow our top line at strong double-digit growth rates. Bank card dollar volume in SMB was $15.5 billion for the quarter, which increased almost 10% to $14.1 billion in the comparable quarter last year. Consistent with revenue growth, the growth in volume is entirely organic and reflective of the strength of our distribution channels and the breadth of our product offerings. From a merchant standpoint, we averaged 178,000 accounts during the quarter, while new monthly boards averaged 3,400 during the quarter, which is lower than the 3,900 during the comparable quarter of last year. Adjusted gross profit in SMB for the third quarter was $35.6 million, which is up $1.1 million, or 3.3% from last year's third quarter. Gross margins of 22.4% in the quarter were down from 24.6% in last year's third quarter. Margins in the quarter were impacted by a combination of higher credit losses, maturation of prior portfolio purchases, and continued mix shift with our top resellers. Lastly, for SMB, segment-level quarterly adjusted EBITDA of $28.6 million was up 3.7% from the prior year's third quarter. Moving to B2B, revenue of $22.1 million was an increase of 58.3%, or 8.2 million from the prior year. Plastiq contributed $8 million of the increase during the quarter. Adjusted gross profit in B2B was $6.3 million, a $1.2 million, or 23.6% increase over Q3 of 2023 as a result of the Plastiq acquisition. For the quarter, gross margins were 28.5%, compared to 25.4% in the second quarter of 2024. The over 300 basis points of sequential quarter margin expansion was largely due to improvements of Plastiq, including effective interchange management and lower credit losses. As a reminder, the sequential comparison is a more relevant metric until Q4 of this year, given the year-over-year comparison of margins is impacted by the timing of the Plastiq acquisition in Q3 last year, and GAAP reporting requirements for plastics revenue recognition, which has been discussed on prior earnings calls. The B2B segment had $1.9 million of adjusted EBITDA in the quarter, compared to $1.4 million in Q3 of last year, and $1.5 million in Q2 of this year. Moving to the enterprise segment, Q3 revenue of $47.1 million was an increase of $11.9 million, or 33.9% from $35.2 million in the prior year. Favorable trends from the past several quarters in new monthly enrollments and billed clients combined with an increase in the number of passport program managers, allowed us to continue to grow account balances, which more than offset the impact of the 50 basis point Fed rate cut in September. As a result of the strong revenue growth, adjusted gross profit for the enterprise segment increased by 34.5% to $44.1 million, while adjusted gross profit margins were 93.6% in the quarter, compared to 93.2% in the third quarter of 2023. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $40.9 million, which is up 37.6% from last year's third quarter. Moving to consolidated operating expenses, salaries and benefits of $21.7 million increased by only $1.6 million, or 8%, compared to Q3 of last year, which was largely due to the addition of Plastiq in Q3 of 2023. However, on a sequential quarterly basis, salaries and benefits was down by 400,000 due to our continued focus on expense discipline. SG&A of $12.4 million increased by less than $1 million from Q3 of 2023, and depreciation and amortization of $13.7 million for the quarter decreased by $3.5 million from last year and is $1.5 million lower than the G&A and Q2 of this year. Moving to the next slide, adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $54.6 million, which is another new quarterly record for Priority, and was an increase of 21.5% from $45 million last year. On an LTM basis, adjusted EBITDA was $197.2 million, which is an increase of almost $10 million from last quarter and almost $34 million since Q3 of last year. Interest expense of $23.2 million for the quarter increased by $3.2 million from Q3 2023 levels due to the acquisition-related debt increases during Q3 of last year, combined with the broader recapitalization effort we closed in Q2 of this year. As seen on Page 14, we finished Q3 with $832.9 million of total debt and net debt of $791.8 million. From a liquidity standpoint, we ended the quarter with all $70 million of borrowing capacity available under a revolving credit facility and $41.1 million of unrestricted cash on the balance sheet. Preferred stock on our balance sheet totaled $105.1 million at September 30th, net of $5.6 million of unaccreted discounts and issuance costs. The third quarter preferred dividend of $4.8 million included $2.9 million paid in cash and $1.9 million of a PIC component. The Q3 dividend was down from $8.4 million in Q2 and $11.8 million in Q1 of this year. The lower quarterly dividend was the direct impact of the balance sheet recapitalization that we completed in May of this year, which allowed us to redeem approximately $170 million of the preferred stock. When combined with growth and profitability, the lower preferred dividend resulted in quarterly net income available to common shareholders of $0.07 per share. As mentioned on prior calls, we remain committed to evaluating opportunities to further optimize our balance sheet, which will have an incrementally positive impact on our net income available to common shareholders. Before turning the call back over to Tom for his closing comments, I'd like to further address our revised financial guidance for the full year. As Tom noted in his opening remarks, we have affirmed our revenue and adjusted gross profit guidance for the full year. However, we are raising our adjusted EBITDA guidance range by $4 million to a new range of $200 million to $204 million. While increases in certain SOX compliance and cloud migration expenses have and will continue to provide a modest and expected headwind to adjusted EBITDA, we believe strong revenue growth combined with expense discipline will allow us to offset that headwind and outperform our previously provided adjusted EBITDA guidance. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Tom for his closing comments.