Thanks, Mike. I'm now on Slide 6 to discuss each of our key product lines. We'll dive into Nylon Solutions further in a moment. But the key takeaway here is that the declines we've been experiencing have continued. Global composite caprolactam-over-benzene spreads were down nearly 20% on a sequential basis in the third quarter and are now approaching prior trough levels. In the fertilizer space, we saw seasonal nitrogen fertilizer pricing declines in the third quarter. I would note that ammonium sulfate prices were much more stable than urea prices earlier in the year. So when urea was falling significantly, we didn't see a sharp of a decline in ammonium sulfate pricing and conversely haven't seen a sharp of a rebound either. Overall, fertilizer demand remained stable and while global value chains continue to be more cautious in buying forward, our order position is very much in line with historical levels, and we remain confident in solid ammonium sulfate demand as we approach the 2024 spring application. Underlying agricultural fundamentals also remain favorable. From a crop perspective, corn prices have seen some fluctuations with changes in projections of estimated planted acres, but remain healthy relative to historical levels. Pharma profitability expectations have also remained resilient. And while raw material input costs have seen reductions recently, costs remain relatively high in other regions, steepening the industry cost curve and supporting higher overall nitrogen fertilizer prices. So as we've navigated through a multi-quarter reset here and through the third quarter seasonal dynamics in North America, the underlying fundamentals continue to support firm fertilizer demand moving forward. Lastly, in Chemical Intermediates, industry realized acetone prices over refinery grade propylene costs continued to improve year-over-year in the third quarter. While acetone demand has seen softness, particularly into the large buyer end applications, we see supply is generally balanced. This has been supported by stable acetone imports into the U.S. and persistent lower global phenol operating rates on reduced demand into value chains, serving building construction and other industrial applications. We also continue to monitor propylene costs, which declined again in the third quarter on weaker supply and demand. Our integrated operating model continues to serve us well in industry dynamics like these. Now across the rest of our intermediate portfolio, demand has remained soft. For our U.S. amines business, which largely serves the space. We've continued to face destocking headwinds as retailers and growers work through higher inventory. Let's turn to the next slide. We thought it would be helpful to spend a moment and take a deeper dive on the nylon industry given the significant change we've seen over the past few months and the impact it has had on our business. Overall, we continue to see global demand declines across most key end markets, leading to further margin compression in the industry. Here in North America, the higher interest rate environment has unfavorably impacted building and construction markets, as well as consumer spending impacting packaging applications like bone-in meat and protective packaging. In Engineered Plastics, Auto had been a more resilient end market for us. However, the recent auto workers' strike has reduced demand modestly. We continue to leverage various sales channels to meet demand where it exists. It does include a higher share of exports, both Caprolactam and Nylon resin, which does come from a mixed consideration for our performance. Exports represented approximately 13% of our total Nylon solutions volume in the first half of this year, and is anticipated to reach approximately 30% in the fourth quarter. This is in line with progression of the cycles as experienced previously, which have historically lasted 18 to 20 months. Amid the soft end-market demand, increased competitive intensity is impacting global trade flows and pricing dynamics. We've seen China's global nylon exports reach all-time highs as their slower growth economy is leading to increased exports to the rest of the world, including Europe and North America at lower prices. In these regions, both nylon imports and domestic supply have been competing for market share with regional price premiums experiencing downward pressure from these low-priced import offerings. As you can see from the chart on the bottom left side of the page, the Asia Industry caprolactam-over-benzene spreads are well below cycle averages and are approaching prior trough levels as seen in both the 2015, 2016 and 2019, 2020 timeframe. They average roughly $650 per ton in the third quarter. Nylon resin pricing, which tracks as a spread to caprolactam has followed suit. Given the pressure on pricing, we are highly focused on driving productivity to improve unit profitability. We also continue to promote and sell the value proposition of our differentiated nylon products, including our new post-industrial and post-consumer recycled offerings. Let's turn to Slide 8. While future cycles may not be predicted by historical ones, we wanted to give some context and perspective to the industry performance for our key product lines over the last decade. As you may recall, we first presented this view at our 2021 Investor Day and the presentation of these charts is slightly different than our typical quarterly pricing charts. Here, we are sharing industry spreads. Those key spreads that connect to our core variable margin equation for the business. The caprolactam chart represents the Asia import Taiwan caprolactam price less Korea benzine, the ammonium sulfate chart represents Corn Belt ammonium sulfate price, less natural gas and sulfur, and the acetone chart is a weighted average margin, assuming the split of acetone large buyer by 2/3 and a small medium buyer by 1/3 over refinery-grade propylene. The cycles predominantly move with supply and demand dynamics and are inherently linked to underlying marginal producer cost curve economics. To note, there have been some structural changes in the market over this period. These include caprolactam and nylon capacity expansions in China and U.S. ammonium sulfate and acetone anti-dumping import duties. As you can see, we have both short- and long-cycle considerations and all cycles do not move in sync. So what does this mean for our business? Despite the near-term challenges we're facing in nylon, we continue to focus our resources and investments in areas of the business with high value and opportunity. We're seeing that play out across our plant nutrients and chemical intermediates product lines, which don't have the same cyclicality profile as nylon. The March of 2019, when our markets are facing a downturn, we continue to make smart investments to position our business for long-term sustainable performance. And we're doing that again now with investments across our IT platforms to support digital transformation, driving further improvements in operational performance and supporting long-term growth through projects like our SUSTAIN program. Now let me turn the call back to Mike.