Thanks, Neelam. Last quarter, we described our business as having multiple differentiated pathways for growth and how that has allowed us to operate independently of market cycles. This quarter is another validation of that model. In a competitive environment, Ategrity delivered another record quarter with all of our key metrics trending favorably. Top line growth of 23.1% with more than 50% coming from strategies unique to us. Expense ratio declined even as we continued investing in production capacity, technology, marketing and partnership management. Rate change remained positive. Cost of product indicators continued to track favorably. We are succeeding because our model is built on two key principles: a long-term view of customer value and a deliberate approach to creating new markets for growth. These are uncommon in E&S. At a fundamental level, all carriers operate within the same growth equation, renewal contribution plus new business production. These are driven by the same inputs. What is your renewal base? What is your retention ratio, average premium, submission growth, quote ratio and buying ratio. The difference in carrier results is driven by which levers they can move and which levers they're willing to move. For us, what we adjust is driven by our view of risk taking and that long-term view is measured in terms of customer lifetime value. For several years, we have optimized the inputs that matter to us. And as the market shifted, these became a clear structural advantage. On renewal inputs, since 2021, we have focused on writing durable, sticky business. That showed up this quarter in a record renewal base and our highest retention since going public. We optimized our retention rate through targeted rate actions while maintaining positive rate across the portfolio. On new business, the levers we can actively manage are submission growth, quote production and average premium. Submission growth was strong. This was driven by our distribution investments as well as our strategic initiatives. Quote production reached an all-time high, supported by the submission volume as well as the quality of those submissions. Our investments in AI and our operating model allowed us to process that volume efficiently while maintaining fast turnaround. Shifting to conversion. Conversion moderated modestly, but that was expected. Conversion is often the least controllable lever for a technical underwriting organization. We were able to win at a higher rate in areas where we have a regional strategy. And finally, average premium. As the competition intensified in larger accounts, we leaned into small and middle market risk in our core verticals where precision, speed and consistency matters most. Those dynamics combined improved the overall quality and renewability of the portfolio. Our results this quarter is straightforward. We retained more of what we wanted, and we added new business with higher expected lifetime value. Our model only works if we acquire business on the right terms, which is why we continue to build targeted growth pathways that position us where competition is less aggressive. This quarter, we launched three new regional strategies in areas with attractive economics and lower competition. Let me take you through how we did this. While headlines suggest that the E&S market is losing share to admitted carriers, the reality is there's a two-way flow, and we are focused on the inflows. Ultimately, there are 50 state-level markets, each with its own distinct dynamics and even more localized submarkets beneath that. Dislocations are constant, and our advantage is identifying them early. To be clear, what we're doing goes beyond simply tracking state-level trends. We analyze municipal level economic, legal and policy trends. We look at submission flows and loss experience, and we even look at admitted market filings to pinpoint opportunity. That work drove targeted strategies in Texas, New England and Florida in the last quarter. Those strategies are focused at a city and even at a neighborhood level. For example, along the I-10 corridor in Texas, we have seen wholesale trade moving into the E&S space, while in Springfield, Massachusetts, older mixed-use properties are flowing into the market. We have built strategies around these specific profiles, and we are offering solutions. And furthermore, we equip our partners with the insights through interactive city guides and targeted marketing, enabling them to source the business more effectively. In doing so, we're establishing ourselves as the go-to-market for these risks. This will, in turn, drive future submission growth, provide offsets should there be any declines in conversion rates. and it will allow us to win on our terms. And finally, this will all feed back into our future renewal base. This is how our differentiated growth strategies translate into above-market performance. Combined with our focus on lifetime value, they create a compounding growth model while preserving underwriting discipline, and this ultimately positions us for superior results going forward. With that, I'll turn it back to Justin.