Good morning and thank you for joining us today. Over the last several years, AllianceBernstein has been on a journey to redefine itself and emerge as a leader in asset and wealth management, and I'm pleased with the progress we're making. We've delivered positive net flows each quarter this year and surpassed $800 billion in assets under management as of quarter end. I want to take this opportunity to express my gratitude to our colleagues, clients and unitholders who have supported us throughout this journey. Today, AB is a stronger company with a distinctive stronger company with a distinctive value proposition, which is highlighted on Slide 3. We have a differentiated distribution platform, which includes our proprietary private wealth business. This gives us an edge in growing markets like Asia, U.S. high net worth, and global insurance. We can also deliver our clients' diversified investment capabilities across traditional and alternative asset classes. This includes our growing private markets platform, which is supported by our strategic relationship with Equitable. In addition, as Jackie will discuss in detail later, we have a clear path for margin improvement, which will reflect on our results as we move into 2025, assuming no market deterioration. Finally, AB has a tax-efficient partnership structure that prioritizes capital returns to shareholders and ensures a disciplined approach to growth investments. Moving to Slide 4, I'll review our third quarter business highlights. First, we delivered our third consecutive quarter of organic growth. Active fixed income inflows totaled $6 billion led by retail where taxable and tax exempt each grew 17% and 27% organically on an annualized rate. We've been among the first asset managers to benefit from reallocation since the fixed income, having registered nearly $20 billion in active fixed income inflows year-to-date, more than 50% higher than 2023's full-year flows. American Income continues to headline taxable demand with over $2 billion of net inflows during the third quarter. Our tax-exempt franchise is also gaining market share and had over $3 billion in net inflows, led by retail muni SMAs and demand from Bernstein Private Wealth. We're also seeing preliminary signs of a turnaround in U.S. retail demand for taxable, with over $0.5 billion in inflows year-to-date into our ETF and mutual fund suite. Active equity outflows of $4.5 billion remain elevated in the third quarter. Concentrated institutional redemptions outweighed pockets of strength in retail active equities where we observed continued inflows into U.S. large cap growth and renewed interest for our value strategies. Second, we continue to expand our private markets platform through deepening existing partnerships and forging new ones in the growing retail channel. Our private markets AUM reached $68 billion in the third quarter, up 11% year-over-year, driven by strong net fundings into our alternative strategies. At the institutional level, we deployed over $1 billion across CLOs, real estate, mortgages, and renewable energy strategies. Last month, we announced the launch of the AB CarVal Credit Opportunities Fund, which is an unlisted, closed end interval fund that brings CarVal's expertise in specialty finance, aircraft leasing and energy transition to the broader retail audience. Our sales teams are engaged across key channels, leveraging our established footprint in the large U.S. retail market. The interval fund is already live with one-third party platform and on track for others. As a reminder, Bernstein Wealth Management has been a pioneer in bringing alternative assets to U.S. high net worth segment, and we're able to leverage this distribution expertise as we forge our third party retail market strategy. A third highlight for the quarter is that our fee rate has stabilized, so we saw base management fees grow in line with AUM. Finally, we're making steady progress on our margin accretion initiatives, including the completion of our New York City office relocation in September. Our adjusted operating margin in the quarter of 31.3% is up 330 basis points year-over-year and we have clear line of sight to further improvement in 2025, provided there is no market deterioration. Slide 5 reflects a summary page of our key financials metrics. Jackie will follow-up with more commentary on the fee rate, performance fees and margin. Turning to Slide 6, I'll review our investment performance starting with fixed income. September kick started the Fed's monetary easing cycle in the U.S., following in the footsteps of other major central banks. Rates moved down and the yield curve steepened, pushing bond prices higher. The Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Index returned 5% in the Q3 with both duration and credit performing well in an environment of moderating growth and inflation. Our near-term performance has benefited from both active duration management and credit positioning as we've successfully navigated a shift in the rate regime and continued tight spreads. 92% of our assets under management are outperforming in the past year, while 65% and 59% of our AUM outperformed over the three, five year periods. Despite elevated volatility, active management of duration and credit exposure has yielded strong returns for our clients over the past year. Our marquee income strategies, American Income and Global High Yield returned more than 13%, 15%, respectively, over the one year period. Relative performance of these strategies was also strong in the near-term with American Income outperforming both its benchmark and its Morningstar category average, while Global High Yield outperformed its Morningstar category average over the one year period. Our outlook remains constructive. Importantly, we observed the normalization in asset class return correlations. As bonds regain their diversification value, credit fundamentals remain healthy and monetary policy becomes more certain, we expect investors to accelerate their reallocation into fixed income by tapping on the large money market holdings. While the timing of the pace of the rebalancing is debatable, the case for fixed income is self-evident and the capital can move swiftly as we observe with cash sorting in 2023. Turning to equities. In the U.S., the equal weighted S&P 500 returned 10%, outperforming the market weighted S&P by 400 basis points as large cap value outperformed large cap growth. Small caps also had solid quarter with the Russell 2000 returning 9%. Among non U.S. equities, emerging markets delivered strong gains in the third quarter, led by China, which posted double-digit returns following monetary and fiscal stimulus measures announced in September. Performance for our equity of equity strategies remains mixed, with 55% of our AUM outperforming over the one year, while 47 outperformed over the three year and 67% over the five year period. U.S. large cap growth performance has lagged in recent quarters. However, year-to-date absolute returns remain strong and the strategy continues to outperform over the long-term, beating the Morningstar peer group average over the three, five, ten year periods. We have more than 20 strategies or funds across value, SMID cap China, emerging markets and international healthcare that outperform their respective benchmarks or composites over the one, three, five year periods. Our U.S. value services across the cap spectrum are performing well. Active management in U.S. large cap value is working and investors who are underexposed or passive in large cap U.S. value are missing out on the experience. Over the last quarter, we had nearly $400 million in inflows into U.S. VALUE SERVICES and we are ramping up efforts to increase client awareness of our differentiated capabilities. In addition, we're seeing increased client RFP activity for our new European growth service. Now turning to Slide 7. Retail posted its fifth straight quarter of positive net inflows and had its highest quarterly inflows since 2021, with a 7% organic growth rate. Our advantageous competitive position in APAC, and our growing presence in the U.S., EMEA, and Latin America helped us deliver positive net flows across all regions. All active asset classes were inflowing in the third quarter and total inflows of $5.4 billion led by robust gains in active fixed income and modest inflows into active equities. Taxable fixed income grew at 17% annual rate or 14% excluding money market flows. Offshore retail continues to drive taxable gains, reflecting inflows into American income and global high yield. Retail muni SMAs continued to gain market share, growing at a 27% annualized rate. Finally, active equity also grew organically supported by continuing inflows into U.S. large chip growth, U.S. select and value services. Base management fees grew 19% year-over-year and 8% sequentially, reflective of market growth in addition to organic flows and fee-based growth. Organic based fee growth was 3% over the last 12 months and 8% as of the third quarter of 2024. Moving to Slide 8. Institutions continued to shed assets in the third quarter with outflows totaling $4.4 billion at a 5% annualized loss rate. Active equity strategies continue to drive redemptions, weighing on channel flows and offsetting demand for fixed income and alts. Excluding money market outflows, taxable fixed income grew at a 3% annualized organic rate, primarily driven by corporate investment grade. We had $1.9 billion in pipeline fundings during the third quarter, with the pipeline now standing at $10.1 billion as of the end of the quarter. Note that institutional fundings accelerated in the third quarter with $2.3 billion in pass through mandates that were not captured on our pipeline. The pipeline fee rate declined as we continued to fund higher fee alternative mandates. Lower fee mandates such as the $500 million systematic fixed income win in the third quarter also drove down the pipeline fee rate. We continue to make inroads, marketing the systematic product to institutional client channel where we're looking to gain market share. RFP activity and proposals are picking up the pace with a notable uptick in requests for fixed income, value and emerging markets equities. This is a good leading indicator for future pipeline additions. However, these mandates tend to be lower feed and will impact our pipeline fee rate. As we add Equitable's second $10 billion commitment to the pipeline, we expect these additions to partially offset some of these pressures. While deployments in higher fee alts detract from the pipeline fee rate that benefit the channels fee rate, which is up 2% sequentially. Turning now to Slide 9. Private wealth posted modest inflows in the third quarter as increased sales momentum versus the prior year was offset by increased redemptions. Demand dynamics within the channel favored tax-exempt, posting a 10% annualized organic growth rate in addition to alternatives growing at a similar pace. More than $500 million of inflows within alternatives were driven by U.S. real estate equity -- real estate debt and secondaries. Fundraising and alternatives remain the key driver for channel activity with $700 million raised in the third quarter, including our newly established CarVal Interval Fund. Within taxable, outflows were concentrated within money markets. As we approach year end, we remain constructive on the channel outlook given strong momentum in fundraising for alternatives and risk appetite reviving. Advisor productivity and sales momentum is tracking at record levels in 2024. Base management fees grew 13% year-over-year and 4% quarter-over-quarter. Private wealth is also a significant driver of performance fees reflective of the channel's private markets exposure and net interest margin. This is defined as dividends and interest income minus the interest expense on private wealth cash. Now I'll pass it to Jackie to cover our financial results.