Thanks, Noah, and good morning. It's a pleasure to be here today and delivering good news is especially fun for me. Results in the third quarter were exceptionally strong. FRE of $652 million was up 23% year-over-year, management fee growth of 22% year-over-year, ACS fees of $212 million, our second straight quarter in excess of $200 million. SRE ex notables $846 million. And for those of you who are focused on SRE and like estimates, we estimate that SRE in Q4 will be approximately $880 million, which will drive estimated full year SRE on a comparable basis to $3.475 billion, approximately 8% year-over-year growth, which will be above the mid-single-digit target we provided earlier. Financial results are the product of underlying good fundamentals. The most interesting and most important fundamental for us is origination. We believe origination is the lifeblood of our business. Origination for this quarter was very strong. $75 billion of origination led by platforms. It's our second strongest quarter following a record Q2. Average spread on our origination, 350 basis points over treasuries, which was stable quarter-over-quarter, average rating of BBB. The reward for good origination is people want to invest with us. Robust inflows of $82 billion for the quarter, led by asset management of $59 billion, retirement services of $23 billion. In the asset management number is $34 billion from Bridge. So inflows ex Bridge, $26 billion. Record AUM at the end of the quarter, $908 billion, up 24% year-over-year. In short, the growth flywheel is spinning. Jim and I have a lot of opportunities to discuss why the growth flywheel is spinning. We like and we often say it's a result of good management. And I think this quarter, not by Jim and I necessarily, but by the team, team worked very hard and produced the results you've seen. But we are fortunate to be in an industry that is experiencing very strong demand. Companies like ours and others in our industry do not get to be big unless we are attached to fundamentals in the economy and essentially are a source of secular growth for our country and for the world. We are fortunate to be driven by 3 incredibly strong fundamentals. Our business is financing the global industrial renaissance, whether it's infrastructure, energy, energy transition, data centers, defense, new manufacturing or robotics. The demand for capital has never been stronger, and it is not a U.S. phenomenon, it is a worldwide phenomenon. These facilities, these investments are long duration in nature and are perfectly appropriate for what we do. And I expect that this will continue for a reasonably long period of time. The second, we are facing a retirement crisis, a gap in retirement income almost everywhere in the Western world. We, through Athene, Athora and the other investments we've made as well as our third-party insurance business are helping to close that gap. This is among the fastest-growing sectors of our business, as I'm sure both Jim and Martin will touch on. And third, we provide an alternative to increasingly concentrated, correlated and indexed public markets. If you want to escape the Mag 7, but still want to be invested, it is very difficult to do efficiently in public markets. These 3 fundamental goods are really the drivers of our business, and we are fortunate to participate in an industry that benefits from this. We are not the only ones to recognize this. If you think about the history of our industry, the entirety of our industry up until the last few years was essentially powered by the smallest bucket of our institutional clients called alternatives. The first 35 years of this industry were funded out of this little bucket. More recently, we've been given a second market called individuals. That second market, we expect to be the size of the first market, and I don't think it will take 35 years to get there. We've now been given a third market called insurance. The industry watching what we've done at Athene now understands that insurance company balance sheets are the perfect place to take liquidity risk rather than credit or equity risk. And insurance companies are increasingly large buyers of private assets as they seek to earn safe returns consistent with matching their liabilities. We've also been given a fourth market, and that fourth market comes from our institutional clients who are now considering and actively investing in private assets out of their debt and equity buckets. As we watch total portfolio approach take hold in the asset management industry, we expect this to grow pretty significantly over the years. If that were not enough, I believe we've been given a fifth market. And that fifth market is traditional asset managers, and I think this has the potential to be among the largest sleeves of investors in private assets. I expect that we will see significant private asset exposure inside of mutual funds, inside of ETFs and inside of products of all types offered by traditional asset managers as there is a rethinking of what active management is. Perhaps active management is not the buying and selling of individual stocks and bonds, but it is the addition of private assets to public portfolios. This will allow our industry to reach clients we would never on our own reach and who want exposure to private assets but will not get exposure to private assets directly. And as all of you on this call know, more recently, a potential sixth market has opened for us in the form of 401(k) and related retirement plans. In short, for an industry that has grown pretty large over the years, we are now anchored by 3 really powerful secular trends that serve a fundamental good, not just in our economy, but in the world. And we don't recognize this by ourselves. Private assets are becoming more and more acceptable and more and more in demand. What do we worry about? Well, we worry about the things that we've always worried about. I believe our industry will find that it is limited in its growth by its capacity to find good investments rather than by its capacity to raise capital. It is incumbent on us to focus on origination to make sure that we grow origination quarter-over-quarter and that we really do respect the fundamental principle of our industry, which is excess return per unit of risk. This is ultimately why private assets are in demand and why we, as a firm are in. I also worry about culture. We -- our industry and our firm, we have been preferred employers for the last 35 years. We work very hard day and night to make sure we do not lose the preferred employer status. What do I have the luxury of not worrying about? Well, I have the luxury of not worrying about credit. I thought yesterday's call by one of our competitors did, I thought, an adequate job describing the current credit regime. From my point of view, credit is credit, whether it's originated by a bank or an asset manager. It makes almost no difference to me. There are fundamentally good underwriters of credit and there are less good underwriters of credit. The observed outcome of the number of articles and the focus on a couple of isolated incidents in the marketplace is nil. 10 basis points of spread widening is essentially nothing. Jim, I'm sure, will spend some time on this, but I've encouraged him not to given this, what I thought was a very successful discussion yesterday by one of our peers. Let me delve in a little bit to asset management. The quarter in asset management and the momentum we're seeing starts with performance. All buckets across our firm performed very well. In credit, up 8% to 12% over LTM, 3% to 5% in the quarter. Performance was achieved without reaching. We are at a really interesting juncture of time in asset management and one that we frame really simply for our clients. We have them ask 3 questions. Are things cheap? Resoundingly no. Do we think rates that matter, long rates are going to plummet? We do not. We think most of what we're doing in the world is actually inflationary rather than contributing to lower rates. And finally, do we see enhanced sources of geopolitical risk? We do. The answer to those 3 questions is yes. The logical thing to do is to take risk down. That is what we are doing as a firm. That is what we are doing for our clients, and we have been able to do this without reducing our need for return. ADS is a shining example of this. 9% annual return since inception, 2.1% for the quarter, 100% first lien, lower leverage, less PIK, less concentrated, 40% less exposed to software. In our asset-backed retail vehicle, we're now at $1.2 billion, up $425 million in the quarter. 70% of the portfolio is IG, 95% we originate on a proprietary basis. In debt, it's always been clear how one takes risk down. You move higher up in the capital structure. In equity, it is also possible to take risk down. Our hybrid franchise, which is now some $90 billion with nearly $12 billion raised year-to-date, 19% LTM return. The flagship vehicle within hybrid value is AAA, Apollo Aligned Alternatives, which is now approaching $25 billion and no doubt will be our largest fund, although there's a healthy competition amongst the various fund managers. Ultimately, that competition is not fundraising, it's based on performance. AAA now has 42 of 43 positive quarters with a fraction of the volatility of the S&P, roughly an 11% LTM rate of return and 12% inception-to-date return on the strategy. This is the kind of performance that attracts assets and that is consistent with our ethos in this sort of environment of getting returns without reaching. In our private equity business, the focus on cash flow and rational underwriting and avoiding fads and trends has served us very well over the long term. Our most recent fund, Fund X, 22% net IRR, already 0.2% DPI. Fund IX, the one before that, 15% net IRR, 50% higher DPI than the industry average. The franchise over our history, 39 gross and 24 net. We're excited for Fund XI, which will come beginning of next year. And we will continue to do what we have always done, which is try and produce excess return per unit of risk and be responsive to the environment and be good stewards of capital. One of the things that we are increasingly hearing in our business is a divide in our industry between agents and principals. The notion of being a principal is that you underwrite a risk that you are prepared to hold. The notion of being an agent is that you underwrite a risk that you think you can distribute. Sometimes it doesn't matter. But when things are priced for perfection, we believe it matters more than ever. The thing that we have done as a firm is to align ourselves with our clients. The amount of comfort that they take with us as the largest owner side by side in almost everything we do is unparalleled and has really set us apart amongst our peer group. So what does the future hold? The future in asset management is all about innovation. You're seeing plenty of innovation. And on our next call, I would expect that we will focus probably in an outsized way on innovation, whether it is what we're doing in market making, whether it is the new addition of leveraged share classes to many of our evergreen funds and leverage against private assets on a much more permanent and much more attractive basis or it is our reinvention of the CLO market. And I expect innovation to take place broadly across the asset management franchise. The outlook for asset management is indeed very bright. And as you will hear from Martin, we expect FRE growth of 20% plus in '26. On the retirement services side of our business, we're seeing the same sort of robust demand. It's very clear that we have a retirement crisis, not just in our country but across the world. The annuity market is a multiple of size versus a few years ago. And while rates are always important, secular demographics or demographics themselves are a driver of growth and everywhere we look, there is a need for guaranteed income. The inflows are literally off the charts. Through Q3 -- first, Q3, $23 billion, year-to-date, $69 billion. We're pacing toward a record year with the [ PGA ] market essentially closed for the entirety of the industry. New business remains in line with our mid-teens ROE target, and we deployed $22 billion in the quarter at 220 basis points over treasuries, almost all IG, very little non-IG exposure on the totality of Athene. There's no secret that the market that spreads for the kinds of assets that are appropriate for insurance companies are tight. And without the access to proprietary origination, this would not be the business that it is. Thankfully, the team at Athene has done an unbelievable job, not just on the origination, but also on the sourcing of liabilities and the discipline to turn off various spigots when pricing does not make sense. And at the end of the day, running an efficient business from an overhead point of view and employing the latest technology allows you to keep ROEs up in periods of time when others are suffering. As I'm sure Martin will touch on and we will discuss on the 24th, the result of running this business over a really long period of time and not being a current period profit maximizer has given us tremendous amounts of flexibility. When rates are down, massive gains appear in our portfolio, which allow us to recycle securities, which does not produce SRE but frees up capital for investment. And if we are successful in creating origination, allows us to pick up spread. We have lots of tools at our disposal to achieve our SRE and ROE targets that others in our industry do not have. While the slope of the forward curve can change and as you will hear from Martin, we have significantly reduced our sensitivity to rates to the lowest in a decade. We are just a very tough competitor. And for those who, again, who are interested in SRE, we expect SRE growth year-over-year for next year at 10%, and we expect average growth over the 5-year plan to also be 10%. We become over time at Athene since the rate of change in our volume is just not as significant going forward as it has been historically, we become a massive capital generator. One of 2 things will happen with that pile of capital that we either we have been conservative on how much new business we will add at Athene, which is the challenge to the management team on the new product side or we will be able to redeploy that capital elsewhere in our business or to our shareholders. In short, Q3 was an exceptional quarter. We're seeing signs not just for the current year of very positive things happening, but the seeds being planted for not just Q4, but also for next year. It's just a fascinating time in asset management and retirement. And with that, I want to turn it over to Jim