Thanks, Johnny, and good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'd like to welcome everyone to Axos Financial's conference call for the first quarter of fiscal 2025 ended September 30, 2024. I thank you for your interest in Axos Financial. We delivered outstanding results in our first fiscal quarter of 2025 generating double digit year-over-year growth in earnings per share and book value per share for the 10th consecutive quarter. We grew deposits by approximately $614 million linked quarter with growth primarily coming in interest bearing demand and savings deposits. Ending loan balances were up 0.3% linked quarter and 13.7% year-over-year to $19.3 billion. Average loan balances were up $269 million linked quarter as origination volumes in some of our C&I and single-family mortgage warehouse lending businesses were offset by prepayments in our single-family jumbo mortgage, multifamily and commercial real estate lending groups. We continue to generate high returns as evidenced by the 19.1% return on average common equity in the three months ended September 30, 2024. Our strong returns contributed to the 28% year over year growth in our tangible book value per share. Other highlights include the following: Net interest margin was 5.17% for quarter ended September 30, 2024, up 81 basis points from the 4.36% in the quarter ended September 30, 2023 and up from 4.65% in the quarter ended June 30, 2024. Net interest margin in Q1 2025 benefited from the payoff of three loans we purchased from the FDIC. Excluding the impact from the early payoff of these three purchased loans, net interest margin was 4.87%. Net annualized charge offs to average loans were 17 basis points in the three months ended September 30, 2024. Excluding the auto loans covered by insurance, net annualized charge offs to average loans were 15 basis points in Q1 2025. Net income was approximately $112 million in the quarter ended September 30, 2024 up 36% from the $82.7 million in the corresponding period a year ago. Earnings per share for the three months ended September 30, 2024 were 1.93% representing year-over-year growth of 40%. Net growth in loans for investment were $49 million for the three months ended September 30, 2024. Growth in single-family mortgage warehouse and C&I loan balances were offset by declining single-family mortgage, multifamily and auto loan balances. Multifamily and auto loan balances. Elevated levels of prepayments and multifamily, single-family jumbo mortgage, commercial real estate specialty and real estate lender finance offset solid loan originations across many of our C&I lending groups. Average loan yields for the three months ended September 30, 2024 were 9.01%, up 47 basis points from the 8.54% in the prior quarter and up 116 basis points from the corresponding period a year ago. Average loan yields for non-purchase loans were 8.28% and average yields for purchase loans were 22.82% which includes the accretion of our purchase price discount. The prepayment of the FDIC acquired loans increased the first quarter 2025 average loan yield by 35 basis points. Excluding the FDIC loan prepayments, average loan yields increased 12 basis points in the quarter. The remaining FDIC purchased loans continue to perform and all loans in that portfolio remain current. New loan interest rates were as follows; SFR mortgages were 8.3%, multifamily 9.2%, C&I 8.5% and auto 9.7%. The credit quality of our loan book continues to be strong despite a few idiosyncratic circumstances that led to an uptick in non-performing assets this quarter. Non-performing assets in our single-family jumbo mortgage portfolio increased by $13.3 million from June 30, 2024 to September 30, 2024. The increase was the result of three loans with an average loan to value of 45%. The properties were located in highly desirable neighborhoods located in Northern and Southern California including one Beachfront property in Del Mar. Non-performing assets in our commercial real estate loan book increased by $14.5 million as a result of three loans to one borrower with a weighted average LTV of 29%. We are actively working with this borrower to bring the loan current. We do not anticipate a material loss from loans currently classified as non performing in our single-family mortgage, multifamily and commercial mortgage or commercial real estate specialty portfolios. Our commercial real estate portfolio continues to perform very well and in line with expectations. Non-performing assets in our C&I asset based and cash flow lending business increased by approximately $40 million. Once indicated cash flow loan with an unpaid principal balance of $34.2 million and one ABL loan backed by accounts receivable of $6.4 million accounted for the increase. The $34.2 million loan is a Shared National Credit to one of the largest logistics companies in the United States. The Axos share of the loan is approximately 4% of the outstanding balance of the original loan. The loan is a sponsor backed loan with the sponsor contributing $494 million to the purchase of the company at the time the loan was made and subsequently contributing another $30 million of preferred stock in June and another $50 million of equity in October for a total investment of $574 million excluding management's rollover of equity. The September 30th payment was made so the loan is current on its payment at the end of the quarter. However, a restructuring transaction was executed between the borrower and a subset of lenders resulting in new incremental debt of $137 million contributed by a subset of the lender group concurrent with a $50 million equity injection from the sponsor which Axos did not agree to nor participate in. The terms of the restructuring transaction favored the group of new money participating lenders over a set of non-participating lenders. We placed this loan on nonaccrual despite receiving the September 30 payment given the information received about this restructuring and allocated a specific loan provision of approximately $10 million in the quarter ended September 30, 2024 to account for a potential loss. We are currently evaluating the appropriate actions to take as we have been advised by counsel that the restructuring transaction may have violated the terms of the credit agreement. With respect to the other loan, the $6.4 million loan is backed entirely by account receivable that have been subject to a recent audit and found by that audit to be collectible. We are actively working with the borrower to pay down a portion of the loan, provide additional collateral and bring the loan current. Non-performing assets in our multifamily and commercial mortgage loan book declined by $3.6 million linked quarter. We increased deposits by $614 million in the first quarter of fiscal year 2025. Demand, money market and savings accounts representing 96% of total deposits at September 30, 2024 grew at 16.3% annualized. We have a diverse mix of funding across a variety of business verticals with consumer and small business representing 60% of total deposits, treasury management representing 20%, commercial specialty representing 10%, Axos Fiduciary Services representing 6% and Axos Security which is our custody and clearing representing 4%. Total noninterest-bearing deposits were approximately $3.1 billion up $80 million quarter-over-quarter. Total ending deposits at AAS including those on and off Axos' balance sheet were approximately up $41 million compared to the prior quarter. Client cash sorting has stabilized at or near the bottom representing 3% of assets under custody at September 2024 compared to the historic range of 6% to 7%. We are focused on adding new assets from existing and new advisors to grow our assets under custody and cash balances. In addition to our Axis security deposits on our balance sheet, we had approximately $450 million deposits off balance sheet at partner banks. We continue to manage our interest rate risk by making tactical changes in our assets and liabilities. At September 30 at approximately 70% of our loans were floating, 23% were hybrid and 7% were fixed. Since our hybrid arms were originated when interest rates were much lower than they are today, the replacement of these hybrid arms with new C&I and consumer loans are generally accretive to our loan yield. Noninterest-bearing deposits account for 15% of total deposits as of September 30. In September we reduced the rate on our consumer high yield savings by 30 basis points in advance of the Fed cut. Subsequent to the Fed's action in September we reduced the rate on our consumer high yield savings products by an additional 25 basis points. We are confident on our ability to maintain our deposit cost and manage it down to maintain our net interest margin in this rate cycle. For the quarter ended September 30, 2024 our consolidated net interest margin was 5.17% while our banking business NIM was 5.21%. Excluding the 30 basis points boost from the FDIC loans purchased that paid off early, our consolidated net interest margin would have been 4.87% up from 4.65% in the June 30, 2024 quarter. When we announced the FDIC loan purchase in December of 2023 our expectation was that the transaction would boost our net interest margin by 35 to 45 basis points. Given the prepayments in this portfolio including the three loans that paid off in the September quarter, we now expect our net interest margin benefit to be between 30 and 35 basis points for the remainder of fiscal year 2025. We break out the average balances and loan yields for the purchased and non-purchased loans in our 10-Q which was filed with the SEC today. To separate the impact of the loan purchases on our net interest margin. We expect our consolidated net interest margin excluding the FDIC benefit to stay within the 4.25% to 4.35% range we have targeted over the past year. While we tactically adjusted deposit pricing based on future actions by the Fed and our competitors, the pace and mix of loan originations and prepayments will have the biggest impact on our net interest margin. While loan growth in the September quarter was below our high single-digit to low-teens expectation from an annual perspective, we are optimistic that we will return to our targeted range. The combination of higher interest rates, a relatively steeply inverted yield curve, elevated used car values and slowly adjusting cap rates on multifamily income properties over the past few years made us more cautious in single family jumbo mortgage, multifamily and auto lending. Lower originations in these lending groups coupled with elevated prepayments resulted in acceleration of net attrition in these loan categories. In this September quarter ending balances in these three lending categories represented a $219 million drag on our consolidated net loan growth. These three loan categories are all hybrid loans with weighted average lives in the three-year range and are difficult to profitably originate in the interest rate environment with a highly inverted yield curve. To match the duration of our growing pipeline of multifamily, single family, and auto loans, we extended duration of $600 million of liabilities to the issuance of CDs and interest rate swaps when markets were most optimistic about rate cuts at a weighted average yield of 3.4% for a 30-month average duration. Given recent changes in the yield curve, we have seen a rebound in our loan pipelines for each of these categories that have been reducing loan growth for several quarters. Additionally, we continue to add new clients and balances in our single-family mortgage warehouse business due to competitors scaling back or exiting the business. Finally demand in our fund finance, ABL and select C&I lending businesses remain strong with the addition of several new lending and deposit teams in the prior quarter. We grew loans in the first month of this current quarter by $160 million which is in line with our high single digit to low teen expectations. Axos Clearing which includes our correspondent clearing and RA custody business had a good quarter. Total deposits at Axos Clearing were $1.3 billion as of September 30, roughly flat from where they were at June 30. Of the $1.3 billion deposits from Axos Clearing approximately $800 million was on our balance sheet and $450 million was held at partner banks. Net new assets for our custody business was $559 million in the September quarter. This marks the continuation of positive net new asset growth we have experienced with $100 million or more of net new asset growth at Axos Advisory Services for five consecutive months. Total assets under custody were $37.4 billion as of September 30, up from $35.7 billion as of June 30. The sales team continues to make solid progress on boarding assets from new advisory firms offsetting the decline in some of Axos Advisory Services' historic turnkey asset management clients. The pipeline from new custody clients remains healthy and we expect continued organic asset management growth, assets under management growth from AAS. From a product and operational efficiency perspective we continue to identify ways to generate incremental fee and transaction-based revenues and streamline processes to make our operations more scalable. We believe that sustained net new asset growth, a normalization in cash balances and operational productivity initiatives will drive positive operating leverage in our clearing and custody business in the medium to long term. We are starting to see some early benefits from investments we have made over the past few years. We have soft launched our white label banking platform to select advisors earlier this year enabling their clients to access our suite of deposit and lending products as well as new features we rolled out such as enhanced personal financial management. This platform leverages the technology we built in UDB for Axos Bank clients and reduces the cost associated with various interactions with advisors and their end clients such as mailing a check or getting a paper statement. We have made minor modifications based on advisor and user feedback and have a suite of additional products and features in our roadmap. The team hires we have made across various commercial lending and deposit businesses are starting to contribute to loan and deposit growth. Our commercial cash and treasury management teams generated approximately $400 million in net new deposits in this quarter due in part to new teams we onboarded in the past two years. More recently we added a technology and a life science banking team in Silicon Valley including a seasoned team that has dedicated experience working together with early-stage growth companies and funds. We also added an experienced leader to build out our middle market lending group. We have over 20 years of experience in specialty lending and a few selected national deposit verticals. These selective team hires allow us to grow a geographic presence and further diversify our lending, deposit and fee-based franchises based on our existing robust set of products. The addition of key sales and operational team members at AAS has contributed to the acceleration in net new asset growth in our custody business. Our client centric approach along with our commitment not to compete with our advisor clients makes us highly desirable to alternatives such as Schwab. Our highly profitable and diversified business positions us well to maintain above average growth and returns in a variety of economic, political and competitive environments. While higher levels of prepayments are a short-term headwind, our asset-based lending philosophy with conservative loan to values and prudent structures and diversified mix of lending and funding affords us more flexibility than most of our competitors. Finally, our excess capital liquidity and loan loss reserves provide more than sufficient cushion to weather an extended economic downturn if that were to occur. We remain prudent with our capital reinvesting in our business, systems and people and returning capital to our shareholders through opportunistic buybacks. Now I'll turn the call over to Derek who will provide additional details.