Good afternoon, everyone. I’m James Reinhart, CEO and Co-Founder of ThredUp. Thank you for joining our third quarter 2024 earnings call. We are pleased to share ThredUp’s financial results for Q3 and our expectations for Q4 and into 2025. We will provide an update on growth, adjusted EBITDA margin expansion, expectations for free cash flow over the next year and further developments in our new AI products. My remarks on performance will focus on our U.S. marketplace and I will provide an update on the significant progress we’ve made with our EU divestiture. I will then hand it over to Sean Sobers, our Chief Financial Officer, to talk through our third quarter 2024 financials in more detail and provide our outlook for the fourth quarter and full year 2024. As always, we’ll close out today’s call with a question-and-answer session. Before I get into detail on U.S. performance and the balance of my remarks, let me provide some clarity on what’s happening with our EU business, Remix. We’ve made substantial progress in the divestiture of our EU business, having agreed on material terms for a management buyout by Florin Filote, Remix’s current GM and the Remix management team. While we continue to evaluate all strategic alternatives, under the proposed terms, ThredUp is expected to fund Remix with a final cash investment of approximately $2 million and to retain a minority interest in the Remix business. Discussions are proceeding well and we are targeting to close this transaction by year end. Now, turning back to the U.S. marketplace, let me start by saying that we’ve made real progress in course correcting in the U.S. since last quarter. While I won’t belabor the challenges we mentioned in August, I will confirm our view that they were anomalies in our operating history. What gives me confidence in this view is threefold. First, we exceeded our own expectations for Q3 and are raising estimates for Q4 and the year. Second, typically secondhand shopping tends to be slower in Q4 as consumers shift their wallet share to new gifts and new goods for the holiday. Over the past three years on average, our marketplace has trended down seasonally 6% from Q3 to Q4. This year, we are expecting just a 4% seasonal decline. Third, despite our customers facing a more challenging environment, they are still shopping regularly with us. While we don’t typically report gross merchandise value, we thought it useful to add that our GMV is growing 7% year-over-year from $426 million in 2023 to $457 million in 2024 at our midpoint. But as we’ve noted on previous calls, we’ve had to be incrementally more promotional to drive that sale. We see opportunities both in what we’re doing at ThredUp, but also in the macro environment to generate higher willingness to pay and more flow through as we turn the page to 2025. We know there’s work to do in order to return to our more ambitious growth and profit targets, but I’m confident we are squarely back on that trajectory. As such, here are five areas I’d like to highlight that form the building blocks of that confidence. First, on customer acquisition and retention. Q3 was the strongest new buyer acquisition quarter we’ve had in more than two years, a combination of better ad targeting, as well as full funnel conversions. In addition, our new customer retention metrics are strengthening as we improve our product experience and dial in our revised email onboarding and push notification reengagement strategies. Repeat rates for new customers are up 12% over the last few months, with LTV-to-CAC ratios and payback strong. Year-to-date, our predicted paybacks are trending 15% better than they were last year over the same period. We now believe we are back in a position to invest more aggressively in growing new buyers while still achieving our free cash flow targets. As a reminder, active buyers is a lagging metric, so the full impacts of these improvements won’t be seen for several quarters, but we expect active buyer growth to turn positive early next year. Second, on sourcing strategy and our pricing algorithms. Continued refinements in our sourcing strategy and pricing algorithms have allowed us to delight customers with incredible deals, driving strong sell through, and expanding our contribution margins despite the lower exit rate out of Q2. Despite our topline contraction in Q3, we generated more cash flow from operations year-over-year and expanded adjusted EBITDA by nearly 100 basis points. Our unit economics remain as strong as ever, with gross margins up 70 basis points year-over-year to 79.3%. We expect our cash flow from operations will be positive on a full year basis in the U.S. in 2024, and the U.S. will be roughly free cash flow break even for the full year. Adjusted EBITDA in Q3 was positive for the fifth consecutive quarter, and as such, I’ll stop speaking to this as a milestone as we turn our attention to driving net income and positive earnings per share in the future. Third, our consignment transition. Our marketplace is in the final stages of our transition to consignment in the U.S. Consignment revenue now makes up more than 90% of U.S. revenue and it’s expected to trend toward the mid-90s in 2025. While the accounting treatment of consignment goods has muted revenue growth in previous quarters, and will again in Q4, it should have minimal impact into 2025. With consignment rates in the mid-90s, our cash flow from operations, and by extension our negative working capital cycle, will continue to improve as our business grows. Our marketplace model can now really shine with our consignment mix at this level. Fourth, our operating infrastructure. We’ve built an operating infrastructure that continues to prove not just a source of durable competitive advantage, but a source of leverage and future profits. With continued improvements in automation and processing, our variable contribution margins are at record highs, meaning the flow through from the incremental dollar of revenue generates strong bottomline returns. This leverage extends to our Resale-as-a-Service business or RaaS. With RaaS, we see more opportunities to double down on these competitive advantages and use our platform to serve not only our brand clients, but also to potentially partner with and to ultimately power the broader resale and sustainable apparel ecosystem. We are more ambitious than ever with our goal of ThredUp being the underlying infrastructure for the vast majority of resale, branded or otherwise, on the internet. With only maintenance and modest CapEx expenditures in front of us, our distribution centers are primed to continue providing additional leverage over time. As a reminder, we don’t expect to need any additional capacity in our network until at least 2027, when we should be able to fund any additional capacity through cash generated from the business. Finally, our generative AI product and technology investments. We have continued to improve the customer’s experience in significant ways. And we continue to believe that AI disproportionately benefits our marketplace relative to other marketplaces and retailers. And the generative AI can significantly enhance the secondhand shopping experience. For years, our dream was to build a secondhand shopping experience that was indistinguishable from shopping new. Advancements in generative AI are quickly making that a reality. Let me double click into a few areas that we introduced last quarter and provide a product update. First, our AI search functionality is now deployed across our platform, bringing a much more robust shopping experience to every journey. This technology is quickly becoming the foundation for all of our onsite merchandising, email, ad tech and marketing campaigns. In fact, TIME Magazine just last week recognized our new AI search technology in its prestigious 2024 Best Inventions List. Second, Style Chat helps customers shop intuitively by inspiration and occasion, bringing engagement and fun back to the secondhand shopping experience. This foundation will power new social commerce features launching in 2025, empowering creators, influencers and affiliates to curate and showcase our 4 million plus items and build compelling secondhand destinations to celebrate the endless expression of thrift. Third, Image Search lets you import any photo into ThredUp’s mobile experience to find premium looks that match your style. The adoption of Image Search has been rapid as customers have made it one of their go-to tools to find what they want on ThredUp for a fraction of what they would pay for it new. This experience is the powerful trifecta of combining Image Search tech, data infrastructure and our vast assortment of available secondhand items. We know shifting consumer behavior takes time, but we’re seeing these new tools unlocking that shift for us. We just concluded a launch of Image Search for Halloween costumes and saw a 16% bump in adoption and usage remained sticky afterwards. We are now able to thematically capture cultural moments, emerging trends or long-tail niche demand with scalable solutions that would not have been possible just 12 months ago. Up next, Ugly Holiday Sweaters. Fourth, beginning this month, we will launch 360-degree high-definition photos for newly processed items in our DCs, giving customers richer information about every item. This will be coupled with new automated digital measurements rolling out by year-end and AI-based flaw detection coming in 2025. While these seem routine, photo quality, flaw detection and measurement accuracy, they are critical friction points in shopping secondhand online. All three are getting a big upgrade on ThredUp over the next few quarters. We should see this translate into improved conversion, lower returns and increased customer retention. Finally, we introduced our premium selling service to 100% of sellers. While you can still get a standard clean-out kit or send items in for donation, our premium service is targeted for customers with high confidence in the quality and desirability of their items. Upon launch, demand for this service doubled overnight, demonstrating the need for premium options on ThredUp. The service is priced higher at $34.99 per bag, with more power tools for sellers such as longer consignment windows, a floor on discount deductions from payouts and more dedicated customer support. We are continuing to innovate on behalf of sellers. Whether you want us to do all the work, you want to do more of it yourself or somewhere in between, we remain relentless in our pursuit of making ThredUp the leading choice to sell secondhand apparel online. We believe this will expand our TAM and at the same time, our sustainability impact. Before I turn it over to Sean, I want to close with a celebration of my ThredUp teammates and all their hard work over the past quarter. It’s been a tough few months, no doubt about it, but we’re back on track with strong momentum in our marketplace and exciting opportunities in front of us. I can’t wait to see what we invent next on behalf of our customers. Now over to you, Sean.