Thank you, John. Good morning, everyone. Let's continue with a discussion of our loan loss allowance and provision. The private education loan reserve was $1.5 billion or 6% of our total student loan exposure, which under CECL includes the on-balance sheet portfolio plus the accrued interest receivable of $1.4 billion and unfunded loan commitments of another $2.4 billion. Our reserve rate continues to improve as compared to 6.2% in the second quarter of this year and 6.3% at the end of 2022. Let's now look at the major variables used to calculate our allowance for credit losses under CECL. Economic forecasts and wavings drive quarter-to-quarter movement in the allowance. We continue to use Moody's base, S1 and S3 forecasts, weighted 40%, 30% and 30%, respectively. We expect to use this mix going forward. Prepay speeds in Q3 2023 were essentially unchanged compared to the prior quarter, resulting in no meaningful reserve requirement changes related to this metric. However, prepaid speeds were lower than the year ago quarter, which is a contributor to the year-over-year change in the reserve. We continue to view slower prepay speeds as a real positive as our assets are expected to stay on our books for a longer period of time. New commitments are also important for the calculation. Q3 is our peak lending season and we added $3.3 billion to unfunded commitments, which required a provision of $153 million. In comparison, we added $1.5 billion in unfunded commitments in Q2 of this year, and $3.1 billion in the year ago quarter, which required a provision of $58 million and $163 million, respectively. Our total provision for credit losses on our income statement was $198 million in the quarter, an increase of $180 million from the prior quarter, but a decrease of $10 million from the year ago quarter. This quarter's reserve increase was driven almost entirely by strong volume increases. It is worth mentioning that both disbursements and unfunded commitments have increased over the third quarter of 2022, but the reserve rate has decreased. This is again a positive sign and another indication of the improvement in credit that Jon has already mentioned. Private education loans in forbearance were 1.4% at the end of the quarter, a slight increase from 1.2% at the end of Q2, but unchanged from the year ago quarter. Private education loans delinquent 30-plus days were 3.7% of loans in repayment. That is flat compared to 2023 and the year ago quarter. In the quarter, net charge-offs from private education loans were $95 million, resulting in an annualized charge-off rate of 2.5%, down from 2.7% in Q2 and 2.7% in the year ago quarter as well. As Jon already mentioned, the annualized net charge-off rate for the first 9 months of 2023 stands at 2.44% and continues to be better than our internal expectations. NIM for the quarter came in at a strong 5.43%, up from 5.27% in the year ago quarter. Our portfolio has continued to benefit from the rising rate environment with our interest-earning assets repricing faster than our cost of funds over the past year. We do expect our NIM will remain in the low to mid-5% vicinity for the full year of 2023. Third quarter operating expenses were $167 million compared to $150 million in the year ago quarter. Roughly $8 million of the increase over the year ago period relates to higher FDIC assessment fees. As we have mentioned in previous quarters, the increase to the FDIC assessment fee was expected and part of the cost of having access to high-quality, low-cost, stable funding. The remainder of the increase was caused by several factors, including higher originations, more loans on the balance sheet due to a slowdown in consolidations and an increase in staffing versus Q3 of 2022 in our collection center, and finally, the absorption of general inflationary pressure. Finally, our liquidity and capital positions remain strong. We ended the quarter with liquidity of 19.3% of total assets. At the end of the third quarter, total risk-based capital was 12.9%. Common Equity Tier 1 stood at 11.7%. I would also like to point out that GAAP equity plus loan loss reserves over risk-weighted assets was a very strong 15.3%. We remain positioned to grow our business and return capital to shareholders going forward. Back to you, Jon.