Thank you, George. Good to be with you all this morning. Starting with our results on Slide 7, assets under management. Our total assets under management benefited from market appreciation during the third quarter, rising 6% to $183.7 billion at September 30, primarily due to $12.6 billion of favorable market performance. Average assets under management increased slightly to $176 billion, with ending assets 4.4% above the quarter's average. Compared with the prior year period, AUM increased 13%, driven by market performance and consistent organic growth in retail separate accounts, global funds and ETFs. Over the past year, retail separate account AUM increased 31% with 5% organic growth, including consistent positive net flows in both the intermediary sold channel and in our wealth management business. Global Funds AUM increased 29% over the prior year with 7% organic growth and ETF AUM grew 88% with 65% organic growth. We continued to have compelling long-term relative investment performance across products and strategies. As of September 30, 58% of rated retail fund assets and 28 funds had four or five stars and 90% were in three, four or five-star funds. In addition, 63% of fund AUM outperformed the median of their peer groups over the five-year period and 84% of retail separate account assets have beaten benchmarks over the same five-year period. ETFs have also had strong performance with 95% of ETF assets outperforming the median of peer groups over the 3-year period and 5 of our 14 rated ETFs rated four or five stars. Across all products, 57% of AUM at September 30 were beating their benchmarks over the five-year period. Turning to Slide 8, asset flows. Total sales increased 7% to $6.6 billion with growth in each product category. Compared with the prior year quarter, sales increased 14%. Institutional sales of $1.2 billion increased 3% sequentially and included the issuance of the new $0.3 billion CLO. Retail separate account sales increased 4% to $2.3 billion due to higher sales in the intermediary sold channel. Strong investment performance from our retail separate account strategies has generated consistently strong demand for the product. Open-end fund sales increased 12% sequentially to $3.1 billion due to fixed income and alternative strategies. Total net outflows improved to $1.7 billion from $2.6 billion last quarter, and net flows continued to be positive in retail separate accounts, ETFs and global funds. Reviewing by product, institutional net outflows of $1.1 billion improved from $1.7 billion sequentially and included the CLO issuance. Institutional net outflows were primarily driven by two larger low fee accounts with an average fee rate of approximately 8 basis points. As always, institutional flows will fluctuate depending on the timing of client actions. Retail separate accounts continue to generate positive net flows in both the intermediary sold and wealth management channels, totaling $0.4 billion in the quarter. For open-end funds, net outflows were $1 billion compared with $1.3 billion in the second quarter, with the improvement primarily due to fixed income strategies. Within open-end funds, fixed income, SMID-cap and global equity strategies generated positive net flows. I would also note that, for fixed income, in total across products, net flows were positive in the quarter. Turning to Slide 9. Investment management fees as adjusted of $185.5 million increased $1.8 million or 1%, reflecting the modest increase in average assets under management and a relatively flat fee rate. The average fee rate of 41.9 basis points compared with 42.2 basis points in the prior quarter. Excluding performance fees, the average fee rate in the third quarter was 41.8 basis points, essentially unchanged from last quarter. Our average fee rate, excluding performance fees, has remained in a very narrow 1 basis point range over the past few years. The resiliency of our fee rate reflects solid investment performance and the differentiated nature of our products such as high conviction and high-quality strategies, as well as small caps, emerging markets, liquid alternatives and several fixed income strategies such as bank loans. Looking ahead, we believe the third quarter average fee rate is reasonable for modeling purposes. And as always, the fee rate will be impacted by markets and the mix of assets. Slide 10 shows the five-quarter trend in employment expenses. Total employment expenses as adjusted of $102.5 million decreased 1% sequentially due to lower fixed costs. And as a percentage of revenues, they were down 50% -- they were 50% down 100 basis points. Looking ahead, we believe employment expenses as a percentage of revenues in a range of 49% to 51% remains reasonable. Though as always, it will be variable based on market performance in particular as well as profits and sales. Turning to Slide 11, other operating expenses as adjusted were $29.8 million, down $1.5 million or 5%, reflecting ongoing expense management and the annual grant to the Board of Directors in the prior quarter. As a percentage of revenues, other operating expenses declined 90 basis points sequentially and by 80 basis points over the comparable prior year period. Other operating expenses were at the lowest level since the first quarter of 2023, even though we added the costs of a new affiliated manager during the period. As George mentioned, in addition to maintaining discipline around discretionary spending, we have continued to streamline our cost structure, including the consolidation of portfolio management support systems. Looking ahead, the third quarter level of other operating expenses as adjusted is reasonable for modeling purposes, all else being equal. Slide 12 illustrates the trend in earnings. Operating income as adjusted of $70.5 million increased $4.5 million or 7% sequentially, primarily due to higher average assets under management and lower operating expenses. The operating margin as adjusted of 34.4% increased from 32.5% in the second quarter and reached the highest level since the third quarter of 2022. On a year-to-date basis, the operating margin increased 60 basis points over the prior year period. With respect to non-operating items, interest and dividend income decreased by $1.8 million, primarily reflecting the prior quarter impact of elevated interest income on a CLO we issued last year. For modeling purposes, an average of the past two quarters of interest and dividend income is reasonable. Non-controlling interests, which reflect affiliate minority interests were lower sequentially by $0.4 million, primarily due to the increase in our ownership of an affiliates during the quarter. Net income as adjusted of $6.92 per diluted share increased from $6.53 in the second quarter. On a year-to-date basis, diluted earnings per share increased 19% over the prior year period. In terms of GAAP results, net income per share of $5.71 increased from $2.43 per share in the second quarter and included $0.64 of expense related to the increase in fair value of minority interests and $0.10 of acquisition and integration costs, partially offset by $0.41 of fair value adjustments to contingent consideration. Slide 13 shows the trend of our capital, liquidity and select balance sheet items. Working capital was $108.5 million at September 30, down sequentially from $143 million as cash generated was more than offset by the equity investment in an affiliated manager, return of capital to shareholders, sponsorship of the new CLO and a debt repayment. Cash and equivalents increased sequentially to $195.5 million from $183 million at June 30. During the third quarter, we repurchased 72,850 shares of common stock for $14.9 million. We also made a $10.7 million payment on our term loans. At September 30, gross debt-to-EBITDA was 0.8 times, and net debt at September 30 was $46 million or 0.1 times EBITDA. We generated $84 million of EBITDA in the third quarter, up 2% sequentially due to higher average AUM and lower operating expenses, and up 3% from the prior year level. Other uses of capital during the quarter included $24.4 million to sponsor the new CLO, as well as $28.6 million for a planned increase in equity of a majority-owned affiliate. We have adequate levels of working capital and modest leverage, providing meaningful financial flexibility to continue to invest in the business, return capital and repay debt. And with that, let me turn the call back over to George. George?