Thanks Carl. Good morning everyone. I hope everybody is doing well. Following a volatile 2022 in the equity and debt markets, transaction activity in the first quarter got off to a slow start and was uneven across various markets that we participate in. We began to see some signs of thawing as the quarter progressed, but the dislocation in the banking sector late in the quarter created considerable uncertainty about the banking system, the economy, and ultimately, the path of interest rates. Fortunately, for Ares, our asset-light business model tends to insulate us from balance sheet-driven volatility, and our long-term investment capital enables us to be opportunistic when other market participants retrench. For the first quarter, our business metrics continued to show strong year-over-year growth, and we're on track for a more significant fundraising year, with seven of our largest commingled funds expected in the market this year. In the first quarter, we raised $16 billion in new fund commitments and ended the quarter with $360 billion of AUM. We also generated strong year-over-year growth of 25% in management fees and 24% in fee-related earnings, while delivering a strong quarter of fund performance for our investors. Our first quarter realization activity was seasonally light, but our net accrued performance receivable continues to build. And we remain on track with our original European waterfall net realized performance income guidance for this year and next year, as Jarrod will discuss later. We continue to see robust investor demand for our alternative private capital offerings. In the market, we're observing a flight to larger, higher quality managers as investors are consolidating their allocations with preferred managers. Many of our largest funds with first closes are seeing significant commitments that represent half or more of the targeted fund size and the pipelines of investors working toward closing is encouraging. We also benefit from having a high re-up and crossover rate from existing investors. For the first quarter, over 90% of our $14 billion in direct capital raised was from existing Ares investors. As we outlined last quarter, we're actively raising our sixth European direct lending fund and our second alternative credit fund. For our sixth European direct lending fund, we've seen robust demand from investors and have accepted to-date, and anticipate through early Q2, subscriptions that will bring the total first close to more than $8.5 billion of LTV commitments. This amount includes subscriptions of $4.7 billion accepted through the end of the first quarter. We continue to see strong fundraising momentum for this fund and anticipate that at final close, the fund will exceed the predecessor fund, which had €11 billion of LP commitments and €15 billion in total capital, including fund leverage. Our second alternative credit fund is also seeing significant demand. As a reminder, our alternative credit strategy deploys flexible capital focused on large, diversified portfolios of assets that generate contractual cash flows. We've accepted subscriptions to date and anticipate, through May, a total first close of approximately $3.5 billion. This includes $1.8 billion of commitments closed through the end of the first quarter. With the robust demand for this fund, we expect commitments to this fund to easily exceed that of its predecessor, which totaled $3.7 billion and we're targeting a final close later this year. This fund, like its predecessor fund, carries a unique charitable endeavor tied to our performance fees, where 10% of the carried interest for closed-end and 5% of the incentive fee for the open-end fund will be donated to support global health and education initiatives. These contributions are split equally between our investment team and Ares. Inclusive of the fund's first closing, the alternative credit platform will have over $10.5 billion of capital designated with this charitable tie-in. And based upon performance to-date, our predecessor alternative credit funds have already reached approximately $10 million for potential charitable donations. In our secondaries business, we entered into a credit secondaries joint venture with a large strategic investor with initial capital of approximately $1 billion. We believe that this well positions us to be a market leader in the growing credit secondary sector, particularly due to our leading private credit franchise, knowledge, insights, and relationships with middle-market companies and sponsors. We intend to further scale our presence in this new strategy with the recent launch of our first credit secondaries commingled fund, with the first close expected later this year. This is another great example of the types of product extensions and growth that we can bring to acquired platforms shortly after acquisition. With respect to our other fundraisers, we're on track to hold a sizable first closing for our third US senior direct lending fund, either late Q2 or early Q3. As a reminder, our second fund had $8 billion in LP commitments and approximately $14 billion in total capital, including fund leverage. We also anticipate first closes for our second climate infrastructure fund, our third infrastructure secondaries fund, and our seventh corporate private equity fund over the next several quarters. Later this year, we expect to launch our third US junior capital direct lending fund, with the first closing expected early next year. And overall, we expect to have nearly 30 different co-mingled and perpetual capital fund offerings in the market this year, in addition to our managed accounts and CLOs. Finally, last week, we priced the IPO of our second SPAC, Ares Acquisition Corp. II. We saw significant demand for the offering, with the $400 million base deal upsized to $450 million. The underwriters partially exercised their over-allotment option to get to a final close of $500 million. At the end of the closing, AAC was the second largest US IPO this year and the largest SPAC IPO since January of 2022. And we believe that this is a strong validation of our differentiated platform and approach to this asset class. With our strong initial investor demand and robust fundraising pipeline, we're already seeing a rebuilding of our shadow AUM, which increased from $42 billion at year-end to over $50 billion at quarter end. With our positive outlook for continued fundraising strength in the coming quarters, we expect to see further increases in our available capital, enabling us to be more opportunistic with our deployment in what we believe is an attractive investment environment. In the wealth management channel, we're excited to announce that we've recently launched our non-traded BDC, Ares Strategic Income Fund, or ASIF. We also remain on track to continue adding distribution partners for our US products, and we're expanding our retail distribution and products globally, including planned dedicated vehicles targeting the European and Asian regions later this year to take advantage of our credit expertise. While we, like others, continue to experience slower flows into our two non-traded REITs, unlike others, our net inflows remained positive in the first quarter with a combined approximately $350 million of gross quarterly proceeds, inclusive of our 1031 Exchange program versus approximately $200 million of quarterly redemption requests. We believe that success in the retail market will ultimately gravitate to a handful of all players that have attractive products across all the private asset classes, a global presence and large distribution and service teams who can provide education and thought leadership to financial advisers and their clients. With our continued expansion in products and distribution and the launch of our retail education portal, Access Ares, in June, we believe that we're cementing Ares as one of the leaders in the alternative retail market. From a deployment perspective, the first quarter was, as expected, slower across many of our strategies due to typical seasonal factors and decreased market activity. That said, the $12.9 billion of gross deployment in the quarter was in line with our internal expectations at the beginning of the year, and we remain on track with our growth objectives for fee-paying AUM for the year. We believe that our private credit strategies are taking market share in a smaller pool of transaction opportunities and we expect that this will pay dividends as more issuers and sponsors experience the benefit and reliability of our flexible capital solutions. Our pipelines are building in our more opportunistic strategies that often see higher deployment in dislocated markets. In alternative credit, the investment pipeline is very strong, as our team is seeing numerous opportunities out of the regional banks, including asset portfolio sales and regulatory capital trades, in addition to their normal pipeline of asset-backed transactions. In our Private Equity Group, our special opportunities team has seen a significant pickup in their pipeline as banks and other traditional providers retreat from the market. We're seeing a growing number of opportunities from companies that need solutions as they struggle to amend and extend their capital structures. In real estate, we're starting to see compelling opportunities from fund complexes that need liquidity to meet redemption requests. The most interesting opportunities currently in the pipeline are in the debt markets, where we can step into the funding gap for refinancing opportunities and provide fresh capital on a structured basis. In direct lending, we're beginning to see more deal activity and some larger transaction opportunities, which should set us up for an increase in deployment in the second quarter. The expected investment returns for this vintage of private credit are attractive with meaningfully improved terms, more conservative capital structures, higher base rates, and significant excess credit spreads. In our secondaries business, we're seeing a growing number of both LP and GP-led opportunities as certain LPs seek liquidity and certain fund sponsors look to accelerate liquidity into legacy fund vehicles. So, overall, we have many strategies that can take advantage of constrained liquidity in the market. With $88.6 billion of available capital and additional closes for several of our large commingled products in the coming months, we expect to have a strong capital base to take advantage of the market opportunities for our clients. This is also a very attractive environment for our affiliated insurance platform to be building its annuity origination business. We now have over $7.5 billion of AUM at Aspida, and over 95% of the portfolio is protected from surrender charges and without the issues associated with a large legacy book. Going forward, we expect to continue to raise third-party capital to further scale our affiliated insurance platform. We believe the strong secular growth that we continue to experience across our business is ultimately result of our strong and consistent fund performance. Our funds' portfolios are generally continuing to see cash flow growth with positive fundamentals. Despite higher interest rates flowing through to our portfolio companies, we continue to see solid cash flow growth, low defaults, and resilience in our credit metrics. For example, our US and European direct lending portfolios continue to see mid- to high single-digit year-over-year EBITDA growth. In direct lending, our loan-to-value statistics remained steady between 43% and 50% for the US and Europe. At Ares Capital Corporation, which is a good proxy for our US direct lending business, non-accruals totaled 2.3% of the portfolio at cost and 1.3% at fair value, which continue to be below our 15-year historical averages. These credit metrics remain at benign levels despite the significant increase in base rates. As a result, our direct lending funds have experienced a significant increase in coupons with a de minimis offset from credit-related issues. Our global real estate portfolio continues to see strong, but moderating rental growth and high occupancy rates. Our highest conviction sectors of industrial and multifamily account for more than 75% of the portfolio's gross assets, with another 12% invested in our favored alternative sectors, including self-storage, triple net lease, and single-family rental. In industrial, on a same-store comparable basis, we saw rent growth of approximately 70% over the last 12 months and more than 90% tenant retention across our industrial portfolio. In multifamily, our same-store re-leasing spreads continue to see 10%-or-better annual growth over the last 12 months. From an allocation standpoint, we continue to be meaningfully underweight to office, retail, and hospitality assets. Our US office equity exposure is only 2% of our global real estate portfolio. And lastly, in our private equity group, our corporate PE portfolio continues to perform well as year-over-year EBITDA increased 10%, including growth supported by accretive acquisitions and synergies. And now I'd like to turn the call over to Jarrod for comments on our financials and additional details on the performance of our funds. Jarrod?