Thank you, Brad. And good morning, everyone. Our 2024 results once again highlight our consistent financial and operational execution coupled with proactive management of our balance sheet and funding sources. Our diversified streams of business revenue and our funding and hedging capabilities stemming from our disciplined approach to asset liability management allow us to continue to fulfill our mission and generate consistent shareholder returns across market cycles while staying in alignment with our long-term strategic initiatives. Net volume growth in the fourth quarter of 2024 was $1.1 billion, and this was primarily driven by strong loan purchase volume in the farm and ranch, renewable energy, and broadband infrastructure segments. Offsetting loan purchase volume growth in the fourth quarter was $255 million for Farm and Ranch AgVantage that matured without refinancing. As we saw throughout the year, changes in the quarterly AgVantage Securities volume are primarily driven by the larger transaction sizes for the product, scheduled maturity amount for a particular quarter, the liquidity and loan growth opportunity needs of the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation's AgVantage counterparties, changes in the pricing and availability of wholesale funding, and the relative value of our wholesale financing product versus other funding alternatives. Based on these factors, we expect AgVantage business volume in both lines of business to continue to be volatile as we navigate the evolving needs of our stakeholders and as the yield curve steepens and interest rates stabilize. Positive momentum that we saw in the farm and ranch, renewable energy, and broadband infrastructure business segments included strong loan purchase volume, which is generally more accretive and higher spread relative to the AgVantage product. The shift in business composition to higher spread business has been one of the drivers of the increase in net effective spread quarter over quarter. We believe that our pipeline and the overall compositional shift positions us well heading into 2025. Turning to 2024 results, core earnings were $171.6 million or $15.64 per diluted share in 2024, and $43.6 million or $3.97 per diluted share in the fourth quarter of 2024. Our full-year core earnings results reflect modest growth over our record-breaking 2023 financial performance, and this is largely due to our proactive debt funding strategies and disciplined asset liability management approach that is designed to minimize earning volatility over the medium to long term, coupled with opportunistic debt issuances that have allowed us to accretively fund new asset opportunities as they've arisen. Net effective spread improved $12.6 million year over year, and this is largely due to a shift in volume to more higher-yielding assets. In percentage terms, net effective spread compressed year over year by three basis points to 115 basis points due to loans moving into non-accrual status, which has resulted in a decrease in interest income, and that has been coupled also with a more volatile funding environment. This dynamic was partially offset by our diversified revenue streams and opportunistic funding and hedging of our balance sheet with the use of callable debt securities. Core earnings in the fourth quarter of 2024 declined sequentially by $1.4 million, and this was primarily due to an increase in operating expenses and credit expenses. These factors were partially offset by an increase in net effective spread, a decrease in preferred stock dividends, and the previously mentioned renewable energy investment tax credits. Net effective spread in dollar terms improved quarter over quarter to $87.5 million from $85.4 million. This improvement was driven by several factors, and this includes our proactive equity capital allocation strategy, where we are laddering and layering duration to minimize balance sheet and earnings volatility, the opportunistic redemption and reissuance of fixed-rate callable debt at lower market interest rates, a modest improvement in floating rate funding levels relative to SOFR, and the expanded yield from volume growth in the renewable energy and broadband infrastructure portfolios. As we mentioned on prior calls, our treasury and funding desk opportunistically takes advantage of favorable market conditions, and this coupled with our disciplined asset liability management positions us very well in changing credit environments to deliver consistent spreads across all business cycles. In percentage terms, net effective spread was unchanged sequentially at 116 basis points. Operating expenses increased 18% sequentially, largely due to an increase in licensing fees, infrastructure technology costs, and higher transactional legal fees that were associated with our broadband infrastructure and renewable energy portfolios. As Brad mentioned, we introduced new segment-level reporting in the fourth quarter of 2024. That reporting framework includes the breakout of our broadband infrastructure portfolio, which previously resided within the rural utilities portfolio, and provides the direct operating expenses within each of our new segments. These enhanced segment disclosures reflect our commitment to providing transparency into our portfolios from both a volume and profitability perspective. Operational efficiency was 30% for the fourth quarter of 2024, and it was 28% for the full year of 2024. Both are in line with our long-term strategic plan targets, and this is a reflection of our disciplined approach to expense management. We will continue to monitor and manage expense growth as we've done proactively against incoming revenue streams. As we discussed on our last call, we are very proud of the on-time and in-budget completion of our multiyear technology investment, which modernized our treasury infrastructure, positioning us well to mitigate risk, increase efficiency, and enhance deal flow. As we look ahead, we remain committed to bringing cutting-edge technology and new capabilities to our customers and continuing to invest in ways to build innovative systems that accelerate growth while closely monitoring and managing our efficiency ratio. We expect that ratio to remain at or below a long-run average of 30% through our disciplined approach to keeping our efficiency ratios in line with our growth expectations. Turning to credit, our performance with respect to credit was largely driven by large loans with borrower-specific headwinds, as the nature of our credit events and charge-offs have historically tended to be idiosyncratic. For example, in 2024, we incurred an aggregate economic loss of $2.5 million, and this was related to a single $14.5 million agricultural storage and processing borrower exposure. A portion of this was sold in the second quarter of 2024, and the remainder is currently under contract to be sold. Our total allowance for losses was $25.3 million as of December 31, 2024, and this reflects a $3.4 million increase from September 30, 2024. The increase was primarily attributable to new volume in the infrastructure finance line of business and a single renewable energy loan that was downgraded to substandard during the quarter. Based on our analysis, the issues involved with this substandard loan are borrower-specific and are not indicative of any broader systemic risk in our portfolio. Overall, substandard asset volume increased this quarter to $440.7 million from $402 million as of September 30, 2024, primarily due to credit downgrades. Substandard assets represented approximately 1.5% of our total outstanding business volume as of year-end 2024, compared to 1.4% of our total portfolio as of September 30, 2024, and 0.8% as of year-end 2023. Ninety-day delinquencies were up from 37 basis points across our entire portfolio as of December 31, 2024, compared to 51 basis points at the end of September. A decrease in the fourth quarter is a seasonal pattern of the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation's ninety-day delinquencies, with higher levels generally observed at the end of the first and third quarters and lower levels generally observed at the end of the second and fourth quarters of each year. This seasonal pattern is due to the annual and semiannual payment dates on the majority of farm and ranch loans. Although we had credit expenses in 2024 that were above the levels we have outperformed our peers in how we have navigated a slowdown in the agricultural cycle, which reflects strong underwriting and credit discipline. We believe that our total portfolio of loans is well diversified, our credit profile remains strong overall, and that we are well buffered given our strong levels of capital. Let me turn to capital now. The Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation had $1.5 billion of core capital as of December 31, 2024, exceeding our statutory requirement by $583 million or 64%. Our Tier 1 capital ratio was 14.2% as of December 31, 2024, compared to 14.2% as of September 30, 2024, and 15.4% as of December 31, 2023. The year-over-year decrease in core capital was primarily due to the redemption of the Series C preferred stock in the third quarter of 2024, along with an expansion into more accretive lines of business such as renewable energy. These lines of business do consume additional capital. This was offset by the efficiency that we gained from executing successfully on two securitization transactions in 2024. Our strong capital position has allowed us to continue to grow and diversify our revenue streams, remain resilient in volatile credit environments, and allow us to offer a source of low-cost liquidity for our customers and borrowers, even in difficult times. As you read in this morning's press release, we are very pleased to announce a $0.10 per share increase in our first quarter 2025 common stock dividends to $1.50, representing a 7% increase from the quarterly dividends paid in 2024. We believe that our strong earnings and consistent capital position support this dividend increase and our overall strategy to achieve a targeted payout that balances a reasonable growth of both previous and future earnings and our expectations for future business volume growth. We are also very pleased with the execution of our fifth Farm Series transaction in November, which is for the first time our second transaction in a year. We received more than three times the demand for this latest offering, which is really a testament to the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation's reputation with institutional investors as well as the overall market appetite for the underlying agricultural asset class. Not only was demand strong, but we were once again able to successfully expand our investor base in both tranches. The consistent Farm Series issuances every year for the last four years have not only built a strong foundation for future market liquidity but also led to continually improved execution economics and greater servicing for the agricultural mortgage-backed securities market. The securitization program remains an important strategic initiative for the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation, as it allows us to diversify our funding, enhance and optimize the balance sheet by efficient deployment of capital. Securitization also enables our growth strategy by targeting new asset opportunities we might include in our conduit. We are very pleased with the tremendous support we've seen from our customers and investors for this program, and we remain committed to being a regular issuer in the market. Our liquidity and capital positions remain well in excess of all regulatory requirements. Our projections show minimal change in our profitability, with limited exposure to movements in interest rates if market rates go up or down. As of year-end 2024, the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation had 264 days of liquidity, and we held approximately $1 billion in cash and other short-term instruments in our investment portfolio. We expect to be well-positioned in the medium term as we move into the anticipated Fed easing cycle, and we are confident in our resiliency against potential short and medium-term market disruption. Once again, our team delivered strong, consistent quarterly results, maintaining key metrics that we highlight on each call while staying within our credit framework, which emphasizes loan-to-value and cash flow metrics. Notably, we delivered a 16% return on equity this quarter and an efficiency ratio of 30%, both in line with our strategic target of 30% and within the range for return on equity. We believe that our balance sheet is well-positioned for market uncertainty, and we are more optimistic than ever to deliver on our long-term strategic plan objectives. And with that, Brad, let me turn it back to you.