Thanks, Ryan. Good evening, everyone, and thank you for your interest in Alta Equipment Group and our third quarter 2023 financial results. Before I begin, I want to welcome our new team members from Burris Equipment in Illinois and Ault Industries in Canada to the Alta family. The senior leadership team is excited to build upon the legacy of each of those great companies, and we look forward to a bright future together as one team. My remarks today will focus on three areas. First, I’ll be presenting our third quarter results, which continue to outpace historical comps as our business continues to benefit from increased equipment availability in the face of strong end market demand and organic growth in our high-margin product support business. I’ll also briefly touch on the increase to our adjusted EBITDA guidance for fiscal year 2023. Second, I’ll walk through the economics on each of the two aforementioned Q4 acquisitions, Burris and Ault, and their overall impact on the financial profile of the business. Lastly, I’ll be presenting a recap of the past 4 years and contrast who Alta is today versus who we were at our IPO in February of 2020. As part of that discussion, I’ll summarize notable return on capital metrics over the past 4 years. Before I get to my talking points, it should be noted that I will be referencing slides from our investor presentation throughout the call today. I’d encourage everyone on today’s call to review our presentation and our 10-Q, which is available on our Investor Relations website at altg.com. With that said, for the first portion of my prepared remarks and as presented in Slides 10 to 14 in the earnings deck, third quarter performance. For the quarter, the company recorded $466 million – revenue of $466 million, which is up $61 million versus Q3 of last year. Embedded in the $466 million of revenue for the quarter is a near 10%, $38 million organic increase over Q3 2022, making for a comparatively strong quarter against increasingly more difficult comps. Specifically, equipment sales increased $43 million for the quarter to $282 million, which will ultimately bode well for future incremental product support revenues. To that end, year-to-date, we’ve now placed approximately $149 million more equipment into field population when compared to the first 3 quarters of 2022. Moving on to our product support business lines. In spite of the quarterly comp hurdles getting more difficult, product support revenues were up $14 million versus last year as we continue to realize organic growth in our high-margin parts and service departments year-over-year. To close out the revenue lines as it relates to our rental business, we saw the natural and expected increase versus Q2 as rental revenues hit $54 million for the quarter, up approximately $4 million from last quarter as Q3 typically represents the strongest quarter of the year for rental in our Northern regions. From an EBITDA perspective, we realized $51 million in adjusted EBITDA for the quarter, which is up $7 million from the adjusted level of second quarter ‘22 and up $3.5 million on a pro forma basis, a function of our organic growth and realization of operating leverage when compared to last year. On a trailing 12 basis, we achieved $184.4 million of adjusted EBITDA, which converted into $127.4 million of economic EBIT, our version of unlevered free cash flow for approximately 70% conversion rate on EBITDA. Lastly, on EBITDA, and as mentioned in today’s press release, given the year-to-date performance, our expectations for a solid Q4 and the 2 acquisitions that were closed this quarter, we are raising guidance to a range of $187 million to $192 million of adjusted EBITDA for fiscal year 2023. On to cash flows. As depicted on Slide 13 of our investor deck, on a pro forma basis, the business is generating just above $81 million in annualized levered free cash flow to common equity prior to growth CapEx, a metric we view as akin to normalized economic earnings available to common equity holders. More on this metric later. Moving on to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with approximately $207 million in availability on our revolving line of credit facility with $36 million suppressed and total leverage came in at roughly 3.9x 2023 adjusted EBITDA. In summary, both leverage and liquidity came in at level similar to last quarter. Lastly, on the balance sheet, I wanted to note the quarter-over-quarter flattening in our inventory levels as we ended Q3 with $493 million of inventory versus $498 million of inventory at the end of Q2. As mentioned in previous calls, as equipment supply chains began to normalize at the end of 2022, Alta, like many other industry participants, saw an unprecedented level of inventory replenishment in the first half of ‘23, which put pressure on working capital and led to redeployment of floor plan lines. As I mentioned last quarter, we expected the pace of this replenishment to moderate significantly in the second half of the year, and we have seen just that in Q3. Currently, we feel comfortable that we are now back within normal range of inventory levels given both our history and our benchmark KPIs on expected equipment turnover. Moving on to the second portion of my prepared remarks, some financial commentary on the two acquisitions we recently closed on, Burris and Ault. In October, we completed our acquisition of Burris Equipment. This acquisition adds an incremental $40 million of revenue and approximately $4.5 million of incremental adjusted EBITDA on an annualized basis. As Ryan mentioned, this acquisition adds important infrastructure and talent for our compact equipment segment in metropolitan Chicago. At a total purchase price of $14 million, the 3.1x deal is immediately accretive to shareholders and to our leverage profile. On November 1, we completed our acquisition of Ault Industries with operations in Montreal and Toronto. This acquisition adds an incremental $50 million of revenue and close to $8 million of incremental adjusted EBITDA on an annualized basis in U.S. dollars. As noted, the acquisition represents our first investment in Canada in our CE segment and aligns us with a market-leading crushing and screening equipment OEM. In terms of structure, the $35 million purchase price, net of excess working capital, was cut into $22.3 million in cash at close, a $2.2 million 3-year seller note and $10.5 million of ALTG stock, which importantly was valued at $13 a share and that’s over a 5-year time frame. The vesting in seller shares mimics the tenor of our new partners employment agreement as it was important to us that sellers were fully aligned and incentivized with our vision going forward. This structure ensures a true partnership and is immediately accretive to Alta shareholders. And like Burris, is accretive to our leverage profile. Now for the final portion of my prepared remarks, I’d like to recap where the company stands today versus where we were just 4 years ago at our IPO in February of 2020. In our view, the numbers are impressive and reflect the commitment of our employees and our culture and a relentless pursuit when it comes to the execution of the plan we laid out for investors at the beginning of 2020. As depicted on Slide 19, we have now formally doubled the size of our business since the IPO based on multiple data points. As you can see, we’ve gone from $900 million in revenue to over $1.8 billion, gone from operating in 43 locations to 85 and increased EBITDA from $94 million to $189 million at the midpoint of our new guidance range. Additionally, we’ve gone from 1,700 to approximately 3,000 team members and from 850 to over 1,300 skilled mechanics. And we’ve gone from operating in 10 states to 15 states in the U.S. and the 2 major provinces in Canada in all 3 of our major segments. So the results speak for themselves, and we’re so proud of the team in these accomplishments. And the growth has come through both organic investments and via strategic acquisitions. To that end, and I reference Slide 20, we believe that we’ve been good investors along the way. When we deploy capital, we are hyper focused on generating appropriate returns on invested capital for our business. And as presented on Slide 20, our economic EBIT yield, which is our version of ROIC on both M&A and organic investments have been impressive over the past 4 years. All told, we’ve deployed $432 million of capital since the IPO and have earned a 14.5% return on the capital deployed. I would also note for investors that our executive comp program’s most heavily weighted metric is economic EBIT yield, or ROIC. In the end, Alta’s senior management is highly incentivized to drive returns on investment, which ultimately fully aligns us with shareholders. With both the performance since the IPO and historic returns in mind, at the bottom of Slide 19, you will note what we view as a disconnect between our performance since the IPO and our market cap today. As a reference point, and as previously mentioned, the company is now generating $81 million of free cash flow to equity on an annual basis or approximately $2.50 per share. This compares to $0.74 per share on this metric at the time of the IPO. So in summary, we have grown this metric 3.5x in 4 years with minimal dilution along the way. The reverse side of this metric is to say that Alta’s equity now trades at 25% free cash flow to equity versus the 7% on that metric at the IPO. While we understand the uncontrollable ebbs and flows of the equity markets, we are highly cognizant of the disconnect for what we believe to be fair value for our equity. And as we head into 2024, we will be laser focused on creating more of our own capacity to grow by optimizing existing cash flow streams and being strategic and opportunistic with capital, as we have demonstrated over the past 4 years. In closing, I’d like to thank my Alta colleagues for a great Q3. I’m looking forward to a strong finish to the year in the coming weeks, and I wish all of Alta’s employees, our customers and OEMs and our shareholders a happy upcoming holiday season. Thank you for your time and attention, and I will turn it back over to the operator for Q&A.