Thanks, Anthony. I'm going to walk through key financial highlights and our financial outlook. Unless otherwise stated, I'll be referring to adjusted results for the third quarter of 2024 versus the third quarter of 2023. Our GAAP consolidated income statement and all reconciliations can be found in today's earnings release and the subsequent 10-Q filing, which will be made available next month. The record results we achieved across all three segments this quarter are a testament of our continued execution, our durable growth in members, products and clients, and our diversification toward capital-light, fee-based revenue with increased returns. For the quarter, we delivered record adjusted net revenue of $689 million, with growth accelerating to 30% year-over-year, up from 22% last quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was $186 million at a 27% margin. This represents nearly 9 points of year-over-year margin improvement, demonstrating significant operating leverage across all of our functions with expense margins decreasing year-over-year. Importantly, sales and marketing continues to decline as a percentage of adjusted net revenue, decreasing by 4 points year-over-year. We delivered our fourth consecutive quarter of GAAP profitability with GAAP net income reaching nearly $61 million, a $327 million improvement year-over-year, or $80 million when excluding the goodwill impairment expense we incurred in the prior year period. We generated GAAP EPS at $0.05 per share in the quarter. On a trailing 12-month basis, we delivered $214 million of GAAP net income. And when looking at the sum of our reported EPS over the past four quarters, we generated about $0.11 per share. Now, on to the segment-level performance, where we saw record revenue and contribution profit across all three operating segments. Starting with Financial Services, we achieved $238 million in net revenue, up more than 2x year-over-year. We reached nearly 11.8 million products in the quarter, up 33% year-over-year or 40% when excluding crypto accounts. We continue to improve monetization across all products with annualized revenue per product of $81, up 52% year-over-year versus $53 in the prior year quarter. This growth was driven by higher deposits and member spending in SoFi Money and significant expansion of our Loan Platform Business, which I'll describe in a moment. Both of these businesses achieved all-time records for revenue in Q3. We also benefited from new monetizable features in SoFi Invest and a saw robust growth in credit card spend. We see significant opportunity for growth in these businesses as well as SMB and Protect, which are all under-monetized today. Net interest income of $154 million increased 66% year-over-year, which was primarily driven by growth in consumer deposits. Non-interest income grew 235% to $84 million in the quarter, which represents nearly $340 million in annualized revenue. A key driver of non-interest income growth this quarter was our loan platform business, where we refer pre-qualified borrowers to origination partners and originate loans on behalf of third-parties. Here's how our loan platform business works. With our best-in-class product, highly effective marketing engine, and network of respected buyers like Fortress, with whom we announced a $2 billion Loan Platform Business agreement earlier this month, we can efficiently match the demand of members shopping for loans with the demand for high-quality loans in the capital markets. When a member takes out a loan, they gain all of the benefits of becoming a SoFi member along with easy access to other products in our one-stop shop, even though we originated the loan on someone else's behalf. This enables SoFi to serve more potential members, while also further diversifying toward less capital-intensive and more fee-based sources of revenue. In Q3, we generated $56 million in loan platform fees, driven by $1 billion of personal loans originated on behalf of third parties as well as referrals. We also generated $5.5 million in servicing cash flows, which is recorded in our lending segment. Our Loan Platform Business in total added $61 million to our adjusted net revenue. In addition to our Loan Platform revenue, we continue to see healthy growth in interchange, up 211% year-over-year as a result of $12 billion in total annualized spend in the quarter across Money and Credit Card. Overall, contribution profit for our Financial Services segment in the quarter was a record at nearly $100 million at a 42% margin, even as we continue to invest in innovation, acquisition costs that require a payback period, and new opportunities to rapidly grow this operating segment with attractive returns. Shifting to our Tech Platform segment, where we delivered record net revenue of nearly $103 million in the quarter, up 14% year-over-year and 7% sequentially. Revenue growth was driven by strong contribution from new clients, as well as growth in Latin America, consumer brands in the U.S., and clients with innovative use cases like earned wage access and money movement. Galileo accounts grew 17% year-over-year to $160 million. The segment delivered a record contribution profit of $33 million, representing a 32% margin. We've discussed before how the pipeline spans banks, brands, and fintechs across consumer and B2B, which offer larger and more durable revenue. The pipeline is in a stronger spot than it's ever been, and the investments made in this segment have greatly expanded the market opportunity. Recent wins and pipeline strength are early, but telling signs that the strategy is working. Moving on to Lending. We achieved record adjusted net revenue of $392 million, with a record of $239 million of contribution profit at a 61% adjusted margin. These results were driven by 19% year-over-year growth in net interest income, while adjusted non-interest income decreased by 2% year-over-year. Growth in net interest income was driven by a 35% year-over-year increase in average interest-earning assets, slightly offset by a 44 basis point year-over-year decrease in average yields. This resulted in an average net interest margin of 5.6% for the quarter. In terms of non-interest income, Q3 originations grew 23% year-over-year to over $6.3 billion, and were driven by a record quarter in personal loan originations, which grew 26% year-over-year and 17% sequentially to $4.9 billion, with $1 billion originated on behalf of third parties for our loan platform business. Our student loans business saw origination volume grow 3% year-over-year and 28% sequentially to $944 million, our best quarter since Q1 2022. Home loans volume grew by 38% year-over-year and 17% sequentially to $490 million, our best quarter since 2021. In the third quarter, we sold portions of our personal loan, home loan, and senior secured loan portfolios totaling $1.3 billion. In terms of personal loan sales, we closed approximately $375 million of loans in whole loan form at an execution of 105.9%. These had similar structures to other recent personal loan sales with cash proceeds at or near par, and the majority of the premium consisting of contractual servicing fees that are capitalized. These sales included a small loss share provision that is above our base assumption of losses and immaterial relative to the exposure we would otherwise have if we held the loans. Our $504 million of home loan sales were sold at a blended execution of 102.6%. Additionally, we sold $81 million of late-stage delinquent personal loans in the quarter. As we've noted in the past, we typically have not sold delinquent loans until such a time that they are charged off. However, we have been able to generate positive incremental value over time in these sales relative to selling after they charge off both from our improved recovery capabilities and by maintaining servicing. Finally, we sold $312 million of senior secured loans at a par execution. In addition, one of our large senior secured loans with $594 million of principal outstanding was prepaid and refinanced by the borrower and is no longer on the balance sheet. Net-net, inclusive of new issuance in period, our secured loan balance decreased by more than $750 million sequentially. These transactions demonstrate clear market support for the marks on these loans with $312 million of our senior secured loans sold at our marked value, and another $594 million of senior secured loans prepaid so the borrower could refinance with another bank at more attractive rates. Turning to the profile of our borrower and the overall credit performance. Our personal loan borrowers' weighted average income is $164,000 with a weighted average FICO score of 746. Our student loan borrowers' weighted average income is $135,000 with a weighted average FICO score of 765. After seeing credit trends peak in Q1, we have seen continued improvement in personal loans. Our on-balance sheet 90-day personal loan delinquency rate was 57 basis points in the quarter, a decrease from 64 basis points in Q2, which is further evidence of surpassing a peak in Q1. Our personal loan annualized charge-off rate decreased to 3.52% from 3.84% in Q2, including the impact of asset sales, new originations, and the delinquency sale in the quarter. Had we not sold these late-stage delinquencies, we estimate that including recoveries between 90 days and 120 days delinquent, we would have had an all-in annualized net charge-off rate for personal loans of approximately 5.0% versus 5.4% last quarter. For our student loans, our on-balance sheet 90-day delinquency rate remained flat quarter-over-quarter at 12 basis points, while our annualized charge-off rate was 69 basis points. The data continues to support our 7% to 8% maximum life of loan loss assumptions for personal loans, in line with our underwriting tolerance. Similar to last quarter, we provided a loan vintage analysis on Page 10 of our investor presentation. Since this only provides a partial window into our loan portfolio, we're unlikely to provide the same analysis longer term. However, it's a helpful illustration of how recent vintages are collectively performing against our 2017 vintage as this is the last time that we approached 8% life of loan losses at 7.85%. You can see significant improvement in cumulative net losses at a given percentage of remaining unpaid principal for more recent 2022 and 2023 vintages. Specifically looking at the Q4 2022 to Q4 2023 vintages, soon after we made material cuts to credit, net cumulative losses of 3.3% are well below the 4.8% observed in the 2017 vintage at the same point of 49% remaining principal balance. The gap between the newer cohort curve and the 2017 cohort curve widened slightly quarter-over-quarter. Furthermore, looking at Page 11 in the investor presentation, you will notice that only 43% of unpaid principal balance remains from our Q1 2020 through Q2 2024 originations. Among the 57% of principal that has already been paid down, we've seen 6% in net cumulative losses. For life of loan losses on this entire cohort of loans to reach 8% net cumulative losses, the remaining unpaid principal would need to charge off at a rate of more than 10%. Past vintages have performed meaningfully better after this point in the seasoning curve, further improving our confidence in achieving loss rates below 8%. Now turning to our fair value marks and key assumptions. Our personal loans are marked at a 105.7%, 142 basis points higher quarter-over-quarter. This was driven by a 97 basis point decrease in the discount rate to 4.78%, which was directly driven by the drop in benchmark rates by 113 basis points and offset by 16 basis points of spread widening. The constant default rate, or CDR, also decreased by 28 basis points, which is consistent with the observed credit trends I just highlighted. For our student loan portfolio, the fair value mark increased by 183 basis points to 105.4%. This was driven by a 45 basis point decrease in the discount rate to 3.99% due to an 87 basis point decrease in rates, but offset by 42 basis points of spread widening. The weighted average coupon in the portfolio also increased by 17 basis points. The fair value gains in the quarter were significantly more than offset by our hedge losses and the negative impact from spreads widening. Net-net, we did not see a positive impact on the reported revenue from the change in marks, net of hedge losses and new originations. Switching to our balance sheet, where we remain very well-capitalized. Assets grew by $1.7 billion as a result of nearly $1.4 billion growth in loans and approximately $226 million of an increase in cash, cash equivalents and investment securities. On the liability side, member deposits grew by nearly $2.4 billion to nearly $23 billion, while overall deposits increased to $24 billion. We reduced our brokered deposits by $445 million as we continue to use our consumer deposits to replace higher-cost parts of the funding stack. Currently, there is a 220 basis points difference between interest we pay on deposits and the interest we pay on warehouse lines, which translates to more than $500 million in annualized interest expense savings, given the size of our deposit base. We exited the quarter with just $1.3 billion of warehouse debt drawn. This difference continues to support our net interest margin of 5.6%, underscoring the benefits of having the option of holding loans on balance sheet when advantageous in collecting net interest income. We continue to expect to maintain a healthy net interest margin above 5% for the foreseeable future and benefit from the continued mix shift towards deposit funding along with our ability to sustain healthy deposit versus lending betas. In terms of our regulatory capital ratios, our total capital ratio of 16.3% remains comfortably above the regulatory minimum of 10.5%. Lastly, we grew book value to $6.1 billion and tangible book value by $236 million sequentially to $4.4 billion with tangible book value per share at $4. Now on to guidance. For the full year 2024, we now expect to deliver adjusted net revenue of $2.535 billion to $2.550 billion, which is $85 million higher than our prior guidance range of $2.425 billion to $2.465 billion. This implies 22% to 23% annual growth versus 17% to 19% previously. This guidance assumes Lending revenue will be at least 100% of 2023 levels, Financial Services will grow more than 80% year-over-year, and Tech Platform will grow low- to upper-teens percent year-over-year. We now expect to deliver adjusted EBITDA of $640 million to $645 million, above our prior guidance of $605 million to $615 million. This represents a 25% adjusted EBITDA margin. We now expect full-year GAAP net income of $204 million to $206 million above prior guidance of $175 million to $185 million, and GAAP EPS of $0.11 to $0.12 per share above prior guidance of $0.09 to $0.10 per share. We now expect growth in tangible book value of approximately $1 billion to $1.05 billion and continue to expect to end the year with a total capital ratio at or above 16%. In terms of member growth, we expect to add at least 2.3 million new members in 2024, which represents 30% growth. Overall, we couldn't be more proud of our Q3 results. We continue to demonstrate our position as a durable growth story, which is reflected in this quarter's strong results. Despite operating in unpredictable macro conditions, we've maintained a clear focus on executing our strategy, driving returns, and helping our members get their money right. We could not be more excited about the opportunities ahead of us as we continue our journey towards becoming a top financial institution. With that, let's begin the Q&A.