Thanks, Bryan. Good morning everyone. Starting with our consolidated results for the fiscal 2024 third quarter. Total revenue was $694.1 million, an increase of 3.8% compared to the prior year period. Our equipment revenue increased 2.5% versus the prior year period, led by incremental revenue from our recent acquisitions as well as positive same-store sales growth in our Agriculture segment. Growth was also visible across our other revenue streams as well, with our parts revenue increasing 5.7%, service up 14.9%, and rental and other revenue up 4.2% versus the prior year period. Gross profit for the third quarter was $138 million, and as expected gross profit margin decreased by 100 basis points to 19.9%, driven primarily by lower equipment and parts margins, partially offset by higher service and rental margins. It is worth noting that the equipment gross profit in the prior year, benefited from the recognition of $2 million accrual on the expected achievement of annual manufacturer incentive programs, which is not included in this year's third quarter results. As a reminder, we recognized $6.4 million of manufacturer incentives in the prior fiscal year, spread across Q2, Q3 and Q4. Our guidance which I will talk about further in a few minutes includes a similar level of manufacturing incentives for the current fiscal year, all of which if earned would be recognized in the fourth quarter. The difference in timing relates to the progress in achieving related targets. Thus, our updated guidance includes the full year's impact of manufacturing incentives to be recognized in the fourth quarter and part of the reason for keeping our EPS guidance unchanged. Operating expenses were $92.1 million for the third quarter in fiscal 2024 compared to $84.9 million in the prior year. The year-over-year increase of 8.5% was led by additional operating expenses due to acquisitions that have taken place in the past year as well as an increase in variable expenses associated with increased sales. Additionally, the inconsistent OEM deliveries and longer preparation time for pre-delivery inspection of new equipment have created some temporary inefficiencies that we are tackling with an eye toward return into normal conditions in these areas as soon as possible. On a consolidated basis, I would expect operating expenses as a percentage of sales in the fourth quarter to be similar to or modestly lower than the 13.3% realized in the third quarter. Over the past two years, we have made seven acquisitions that accounted for approximately $670 million in annualized revenue. Overall and as is typical, those acquisitions came with a higher operating expense as a percentage of sales than our base business, albeit some with favorable gross margin offsets. As David and Bryan have touched on already, we are focused on integration activities and resource reallocation, so the business is optimized to deliver operational efficiencies through the cycle. We have a long track record of acquiring businesses and improving their financial metrics over time to be in line with our overall financial targets, and I'd expect that we'll be able to demonstrate that in the future as well. Floor plan and other interest expense was $5.5 million as compared to $1.8 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2023, primarily due to higher interest bearing floor plan borrowings driven by higher inventory levels. Additionally, we used the capacity of our existing Bank Syndicate floor plan facility to finance the O'Connor's acquisition. Net income for the third quarter of fiscal 2024 was $30.2 million or $1.32 per diluted share and compares to last year's third quarter net income of $41.3 million or $1.82 per diluted share. Now turning to our segment results for the third quarter. In our agriculture segment, sales increased 7.7% to $531.4 million. This growth was driven by our acquisition of Pioneer Equipment as well as same store sales growth of 3.5%, which was achieved on top of a very robust 46.4% same store sales increase in the prior year, and same store sales growth of 28% the year prior to that. As previously discussed, third quarter revenues were constrained by the delayed OEM deliveries and capacity constraints of our service department. Agriculture segment pre-tax income was $35.1 million and compared to $42 million in the third quarter of the prior year, which implies a pretext margin decrease of 190 basis points to 6.6%. In our construction segment, sales declined 10.3% to $77.5 million. As Bryan already mentioned, the timing of equipment deliveries in the back half of this year versus the back half of last year creates some variability in the year over year comparability. We expect this headwind to shift to a tailwind in the fourth quarter where we anticipate generating year over year growth. Pre-tax income was $4.1 million and compared to $6.1 million in the third quarter of the prior year, and our year over year pretext margin decreased by approximately 180 basis points to 5.2%. In our Europe segment, sales decreased by 4.3% to $85.2 million, which reflects a 7.9% currency tailwind on the strengthening Europe. Net of the effect of these foreign currency fluctuations, revenue decreased 10.4%, reflecting a softening of demand in Bulgarian and Romania, which were negatively impacted by the aforementioned dry conditions and lower yields. Pre-tax income was $5.1 million and compares to $8.5 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2023, which implies a pretax margin decrease of 350 basis points to 6%. Given some of the timing and constraint related items we mentioned, it's useful to look at year to date margins across our segments to get a better sense of things. Through the first nine months of the year, the AG segments pre-tax margin is 6.5% or 70 basis points lower than the prior year. CE's pretext margins are 5.9%, which are flat with the prior year, and Europe's pretext margins are 6.8% or 90 basis points lower than the first nine months of the prior year. Now, on to our balance sheet and inventory positions, we had cash of $70 million and in an adjusted debt to tangible net worth ratio of 1.1x as of October 31, 2023, which is well below our bank covenant of 3.5x. Equipment inventory increased $98.8 million in the third quarter. As we discussed in detailed during our second quarter earnings call, our domestic Ag segment was still a little short of targeted inventory levels at that time, and we expected inventories to increase modestly during the third quarter based on planned OEM ship dates and projected customer deliveries. We also expected to start working down the amount of pre-sold equipment and inventory back toward normal levels; however, as David touched on earlier, given the dynamics of longer preparation times and prioritization of service for customers existing equipment, our progress on reducing the amount of pre-sold equipment and inventory stalls. Given that we are largely past the busy fall season, we should have more time to dedicate toward delivering pre-sold equipment to customers in the fourth quarter. But the inventory balance at the end of the fiscal year will be dependent on both the timing of incremental equipment deliveries from OEMs, as well as the pace of our pre-delivery inspection work. Overall, we expect there will be like -- there will likely be an increase in our total ending inventory on the balance sheet, similar to the increase we saw in the third quarter, and then stabilize within arrange thereafter, as things normalize. We will also see the O'Connor's balance sheet added to our financials in the fourth quarter as well. With that, I'll finish sharing by -- I'll finish by sharing a few comments on our fiscal 2024 full year guidance, which we have updated to reflect the year-to-date performance of our businesses. We are positioned well for a strong fourth quarter, and we have narrowed the range of expected revenue for each segment, contemplating the continuation of limited availability of a few key equipment categories and the longer prep times for pre-delivery inspections we have been experiencing. We now expect our Ag segment to finish up 20% to 23%, our construction segment to be at 4% to 7%, and our Europe segment to be at 4% to 7%. With respect to our new Australia reporting segment, we completed the O'Connor's transaction on October 2nd. Similar to Europe, these results will be reported on a one-month lag, and as anticipated, this will result in three months of activity being reported in our fiscal 2024 results. With all of that said, we are refining our fiscal 2024 revenue estimate to be $70 million to $80 million with a diluted EPS contribution in the range of $0.10 to $0.15, when factoring in financing and integration related expenses. As a reminder, fourth quarter gross margins are typically a few 100 basis points lower sequentially than the third quarter, largely driven by mix and larger tax incentivized purchases with multi-unit discounts. The same is expected to hold true this year. Additionally, we continue to expect modest normalization of equipment margins consistent with improved inventory levels and equipment availability. Gross margin in the third quarter was about a hundred basis points lower than the prior year's third quarter, and I would expect a similar 100 basis point normalization year-over-year in the fourth quarter, partially offset by the anticipated incremental manufacturer incentives that I already mentioned. Overall, with margin strength offsetting slightly lower sales expectations for the year, our underlying EPS guidance, excluding the positive impact from the O'Connor's transaction, remains unchanged as compared to the guidance that we established at the beginning of the fiscal year. We look forward to finishing the year strong and delivering on the record results that we committed to nine months ago, and we are really proud of that. This concludes our prepared comments and we are now ready to take questions.