Thanks, Ed, and all the best on your well-deserved retirement. Also, congratulations to Pat and Derek. I look forward to working even closer with you as we deliver for our customers together. We said it on the Q2 call that our commitment to our customers is to provide industry-leading service, and we continue to deliver on our promise. As for volumes, we believe the worst is behind us. They hit the bottom in July. We saw improvement in August and September. Through the rest of the year, we expect this trend to continue, and I'll give some more details in a moment. We continue to deliver core pricing ahead of CN inflation. The pricing environment remains robust, and our service levels are facilitating pricing conversations with our customers. We started the quarter in a bit of a hole with the port strike on the West Coast. This impacted international intermodal more than any other business segment. And as Tracy mentioned, we continue to see a hangover effect from cargo diversions to U.S. gateways. We ended the quarter with UAW strike starting at the Detroit Big 3. Fortunately, this only had a limited impact on our volumes in Q3. Turning to Slide 9 now, third quarter revenues were nearly $4 billion, down 12% versus last year on lower fuel surcharge rates, lower volumes, but partially offset by solid pricing. RTMs were down 5%, but excluding overseas, were up 1% for the quarter as we see a continuing recovery across the other business lines. For merchandise, metals and minerals, finished with the best quarter so far this year, supported by increased drilling programs in Western Canada driving strong sand shipments. Demand for forest products remains below pre-COVID levels due to a challenging macro environment. Lower petroleum volumes in the quarter were mostly due to spot crude unit trains that we moved last year. We should lap that tougher comp in the fourth quarter. Plastics and chemicals sequentially strengthened in the quarter, which is a leading indicator of industrial production. Automotive continued to benefit from strong pent-up demand with limited strike impact. Turning to intermodal, I will remind you that storage revenues were normalized this year following last year's supply chain issues, which represents an impact of about $100 million in the quarter. In domestic intermodal, we saw the monthly year-over-year numbers turn positive in Q3, in part because of our Falcon service between Canada, Detroit and Mexico. International intermodal continues to be weak, but we were impacted -- and we're impacted by the West Coast port strike. We continue to see lighter U.S. discharge at Rupert and Vancouver, and we're working hard with our customers to get that volume back. Our bulk business has been outperforming since the start of the year. Starting with grain, we saw a strong weekly ramp-up in Canadian grain in September with the crops coming off the field about 3 weeks earlier than last year. Building on our strong service from the last crop year, grain is now rolling, and we expect strong volumes until at least next spring. We handled record potash volumes in the third quarter to export markets and the U.S. market. The operating team is providing outstanding service to our customers for this incremental volume, but we are being careful not to oversell the network. Finally, the West Coast strike and subsequent terminal outage had a minor impact on met coal in the quarter, but commodity prices are still supportive of ongoing export volumes. Looking ahead to the balance of the year on Slide 10, we're seeing lots of momentum across almost all of our markets. With bulk leading the charge, Canadian grain is running full out. U.S. grain will also be strong, and similar to 2022, benefiting from record low water levels on the Mississippi and limited barge capacity, but tempered by demand in China. We expect solid potash demand in line with the Q3 run rate, and there could be additional upside with a robust export market. Canadian met coal should be strong for the rest of the year, and we have set an annual export record already with one of our largest customers. For overseas intermodal, we are seeing clear indicators of positive trends. Destocking appears to be nearing an end, but wholesale inventory to sales ratios remain elevated. We are forecasting a gradual improvement throughout 2024. On the domestic side, both retail and wholesale are tracking favorably over last year. As Tracy said, domestic is also helped by some growth initiatives. Rounding out with merchandise, we have a strong outlook for drilling with frac sand demand, aided by our network capacity enhancements in Northern BC. We expect automotive to outperform with continued pent-up demand contingent on how long the UAW strike goes on. And we expect a continued positive trend in chemicals, plastics and metals, and stable forest products. October is off to a good start and in line with how we have been modeling the quarter. Before I hand it over to Ghislain, I want to review on some of the unique growth initiatives we laid out at Investor Day. We announced our new long-term agreement with AltaGas yesterday, which will drive an increase in LPG export carloads through Prince Rupert and Ferndale, Washington. CN, along with our customers and supply chain partners, continue to invest and develop the Rupert gateway, which we highlighted at our May Investor Day. On the Falcon product, we've been building up this service since its launch in May. It's now a solid and consistent product. In line with truck transits, we saw our first loads with STG Logistics a couple of weeks ago, and we continue to actively pursue opportunities to build density to and from Mexico as major RFPs come up for bid. CN's Eastern fuel strategy is progressing with the new distribution terminal in Toronto, ready to start receiving cars in December. In line with what we projected at Investor Day, we expect volumes to build over 2024. We continue to work with our customers on building up the electric vehicle supply chain. We now have 5 announced projects on our network in Eastern Canada. It's going to take a few years to fully develop this opportunity, but we're pleased to already see the first shipments of raw lithium moving on CN for export at Quebec City. Our Northern BC strategy is also progressing, as we finished the first capacity project in the area this month. This will allow CN to add additional frac sand and propane shipments to the network. To finish, I'm really excited about the next year and will have more to report on these opportunities in January. Over to you, Ghislain.