Thanks, Andy. Total reported revenue for the quarter was $1,357 million. We reported a net loss attributable to common shareholders of $979 million or $2.50 per share in the third quarter. This included an $885 million impairment of goodwill, a $114 million asset retirement charge and $7 million in merger and integration expenses. Excluding the goodwill impairment, asset retirement charge and merger and integration expenses, our adjusted net income would have been $2 million. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter totaled $275 million, which also excludes the previously mentioned special items. Our weighted average share count was 392 million shares during Q3 and we exited the quarter with 390 million shares outstanding. As previously noted, during the third quarter, we reported an $885 million charge related to the impairment of goodwill that was recorded with the NexTier merger. The merger was a stock-for-stock transaction that was negotiated at a 0 premium to the market price of a share of next year at the time of the deal announcement on June 15, 2023. The recorded equity consideration was based on Patterson-UTI’s share price at the time the transaction closed on September 1, 2023, which was 34% higher relative to the announcement date. This higher share price resulted in higher recorded equity consideration, leading to the recognition of goodwill from the transaction, the goodwill impairment related to our Completion Services reporting segment. On a periodic basis, we evaluate our fleet of drilling rigs for marketability based on the condition of inactive rigs, expenditures that would be necessary to bring in active rigs to working condition and the expected demand for Drilling Services by rig type. The components comprising rigs that will no longer be marketed are evaluated, and those components with continuing utility to our other marketed rigs are transferred to other rigs or to our yards to be used as spare equipment. The remaining components of these rigs are retired. In the third quarter of 2024, we identified 42 legacy non-Tier 1 rigs and equipment to be retired. Given our updated view on the outlook for industry drilling activity in the U.S., we believe these rigs have limited commercial opportunity and are unlikely to ever return to work with our significant capital investment. We recorded a $114 million charge related to this retirement in the third quarter of 2024. During the first 9 months of the year, we generated $322 million of free cash flow, with more than $100 million generated in the third quarter. During the third quarter, we returned $71 million to shareholders, including an $0.08 per share dividend and $40 million used to repurchase more than 4 million shares. In the fourth full quarter since we closed the NexTier merger and Ulterra acquisition, we have used $346 million to repurchase shares. This is in addition to reducing net debt, including leases and paying a steady dividend. Our cash returned to shareholders in the first full quarter since the NexTier merger and Ulterra acquisition closed, totaled 15% of the current market cap, while our net debt, including leases over that same time is down 7%. We have lowered our share count by 7% over that same time period. In our Drilling Services segment, third quarter revenue was $422 million and adjusted gross profit totaled $171 million. In U.S. Contract Drilling, we totaled 9,870 operating days. Average rig revenue per day was $36,000, with average rig operating cost per day of $19,900. The average adjusted rig gross profit per day was $16,100. We continue to see a relatively steady revenue per day with mostly steady recent pricing for our top-tier assets. We also saw a sequential improvement in our cost per day during the quarter. On September 30, we had contracts for drilling rigs in the U.S., providing for approximately $401 million of future day rate drilling revenue. Based on contracts currently in place, we expect an average of 58 rigs operating under term contracts during the fourth quarter of 2024 at an average of 33 rigs operating under term contracts over the 4 quarters ending September 30, 2025. In our other drilling services businesses besides U.S. Contract Drilling, which is mostly International Contract Drilling and Directional Drilling, third quarter revenue was $66 million with an adjusted gross profit of $11 million. We saw an improvement in our Directional Drilling results compared to the second quarter, driven by market share gains and higher margins. For the fourth quarter in U.S. Contract Drilling, we expect to average 106 active rigs with adjusted gross profit per operating day of slightly less than $15,000. The reduction in margins is a function of contract churn in the drilling business as our contract book continues to reset to the current market rate. However, we are encouraged by the resiliency of recent term contract rates. Aside from U.S. Contract Drilling, we expect other Drilling Services adjusted gross profit to be down slightly compared to the third quarter. Revenue for the third quarter in our Completion Services segment totaled $832 million, with an adjusted gross profit of $128 million. We saw a slight increase in revenue on a shift towards more jobs with additional completion-related integration services. However, several of our fleets experienced unplanned gaps, which impacted fixed cost leverage on those fleets compared to the second quarter. The higher revenue was mostly a function of an increase in activity in natural gas basins relative to the second quarter. During the fourth quarter, we expect to see lower pumping hours compared to the third quarter as our customers flex completion activity to maintain spending within their budgets, while there is also additional downtime associated with normal holiday seasonality. For the fourth quarter, we expect Completion Services adjusted gross profit to be approximately $85 million. We believe the Completion Services segment is likely to see higher adjusted gross profit in the first half of 2025 relative to our expectations for the second half of this year. Third quarter Drilling Products revenue totaled $89 million, which was a 4% increase sequentially. Adjusted gross profit was $42 million. The higher sequential improvement in revenue was mostly the result of the resumption of normal activity in Canada following normal spring breakup. In the U.S., we saw higher revenue and margins even on a lower U.S. industry rig count as our U.S. operations continue to see strong share gains in margins. For the fourth quarter, we expect a slight sequential increase in Drilling Products revenue and adjusted gross profit compared to the third quarter driven by growth in our international business, while revenue in the U.S. business is expected to decline slightly on a lower industry rig count. Other revenue totaled $15 million for the quarter with $5 million in adjusted gross profit. We expect other fourth quarter revenue and adjusted gross profit to be flat with the third quarter. Reported selling, general and administrative expenses in the third quarter were $65 million. For Q4, we expect SG&A expenses of approximately $65 million. On a consolidated basis for the third quarter, total depreciation, depletion, amortization and impairment expense excluding the goodwill impairment totaled $375 million, of which $114 million was from the previously mentioned drilling rig asset retirement. For the fourth quarter, we expect total depreciation, depletion, amortization and impairment expense of approximately $255 million. During Q3, total CapEx was $181 million, including $69 million in Drilling Services, $87 million in Completion Services, $16 million in Drilling Products and $8 million in other at corporate. For the fourth quarter, we expect total CapEx of roughly $150 million, which brings our full year CapEx expectation to around $690 million. We are proud of the way we have managed our CapEx in 2024, and our CapEx this year is expected to come in materially below our original budget. Yet we are exiting the year with more next-generation electric horsepower than what we expected in the original budget and one of the highest quality drilling rig fleets in the industry. We will continue to make targeted investments in next-generation equipment across all our businesses while also maintaining a strict focus on capital discipline. We closed Q3 with nothing drawn on our $615 million revolving credit facility as well as a $115 million in cash on hand. We do not have any senior note maturities until 2028. All three rating agencies have recently affirmed our investment-grade credit rating. The investment-grade rating allows us to maintain a lower cost of capital, and we are focused on managing our capital structure in a way that protects our credit rating. We expect to generate another quarter of strong free cash flow in the fourth quarter. We still expect approximately 40% of our adjusted EBITDA to convert to free cash flow in 2024, including customer prepayments we received in 2023 for work performed in 2024. Our Board has approved an $0.08 per share dividend for Q4. Year-to-date through the third quarter, we have returned $366 million to shareholders, consisting of $270 million for share repurchases and $96 million for dividends. After we pay our dividend in Q4, we would have reached our goal to return at least $400 million to our shareholders in 2024. We are continuing to explore all uses of cash, including the option to further accelerate our share repurchases. I’ll now turn it back over to Andy Hendricks for closing remarks.