Thank you, Jon Cheigh, and good morning. We will start by addressing the current state of our business, then review our key business trends in the quarter, and close with a discussion of our strategic priorities. Four weeks ago, we published our 2024 annual report to shareholders entitled Positioned for Growth. On April second, so-called liberation day, the administration announced a tariff policy that was more severe than expected and turned the global economic and geopolitical regimes on their heads. With the financial markets following suit with powerful volatility. Everyone quickly recognized that business decision-making would slow or cease entirely, raising the specter of recession. As a firm, we are still positioned for growth. Notwithstanding the post-quarter setbacks in markets and asset levels. Our relative investment performance as Jon reviewed, is still strong and is the leading edge of our optimism. As I will discuss further, our institutional advisory unfunded pipeline declined in the quarter but our business activity remains healthy. Our wealth channel has led the way to firm-wide net inflows for the past three quarters. In addition, the case for real assets is gaining momentum as the reality of a nagging inflation backdrop gains wider acceptance. Meantime, portfolio liquidity has become a priority for clients as the cost of illiquidity and private allocations have become increasingly evident. Depending on how long the tariff roulette wheel spins, and considering it's not going to affect our eyes are on potential for recession. While this could slow the ramp-up of some of our recent vehicle launches, we are committed to these initiatives which we view as must-dos to enhance our market position. And as our habit, we would expect to further innovate to capitalize on any dislocations opportunities that emerge. Behind this executive summary is a well-organized and highly motivated leadership team that is backed by a very strong balance sheet. Looking at key fundamentals, in the first quarter, we had our third consecutive quarter of net inflows firm-wide at $222 million which followed $860 million in the preceding quarter and $1.3 billion in the third quarter of last year, when the Federal Reserve commenced its rate-cutting cycle. Leading flows in the quarter were open-end funds with $585 million of net inflows, offset by outflows in both advisory at $108 million and all sub-advisory at $258 million. Our inflows stand out considering that most of our strategy categories have been in outflows according to Morningstar open-end fund data. Our positive differential to me comes down to a combination of our outstanding investment performance, our brand recognition, and strong client relationships. Accordingly, our market share of active open-end fund AUM is continuing to increase in US real estate, global real estate, preferreds, and global listed infrastructure. Leading flows in the quarter was global listed infrastructure, which had $586 million of net inflows, offset by net outflows in US real estate of $217 million, global real estate at $166 million, and preferreds at $76 million. Highlights for open-end funds include the breadth and flows across most key segments such as wirehouses, RIAs, independent and regional broker-dealers, bank trust, and defined contribution. Our gross sales for open-end funds annualized at $12.8 billion in line with our average over the past several years. SMAs and models had outflows of $44 million and offshore CCAVs had inflows of $71 million. And we had modest inflows into our newly launched active ETFs which I will discuss in a moment. Institutional Advisory's net outflows of $108 million were comprised of five new mandates totaling $147 million offset by two account terminations totaling $231 million and negative rebalancings of $223 million by existing clients. The weak spot in the quarter is our one unfunded pipeline, which ended the quarter at $61 million compared with $531 million last quarter. Obviously, that is a low number for us and reflects a lot of completed fundings and the timing of a number of finals competitions we are anticipating plus some customized mandates we continue to work on. While it is tempting to attribute the low pipeline to the market environment, the regime change in interest rates has already occurred and thus we need to translate the solid level of activity in institutional advisory to wins. Last quarter, we indicated that we had approximately $800 million in pending redemptions. The majority of those have occurred and the known redemptions now stand at $290 million after the addition of one pending rebalancing outflow of $64 million. Turning to strategic initiatives. In February, we launched our first three active ETFs in real estate, preferreds, and natural resource equities. The strategies are compelling, differentiated, and by design, not thematic. But core strategies for asset allocators, they were seeded with firm capital, and we have but begun to see inflows. We're pleased with the pace of flows particularly through the natural resource equities ETF. We believe these vehicles will open access to investors who use them exclusively and thus expand our addressable market considerably. Given that AUM in active ETFs has surpassed $1 trillion industry-wide. At the same time, there are advisors who are converting their business away from open-end funds to ETFs. These vehicles will help us retain those assets particularly with RIAs who have growing asset bases. Our long-term strategy includes the development of ETFs for all of our core strategies and we're working on round two. Understanding that implementation from here could vary based on how the market adopts different structures such as ETFs, as a shared class of open-end funds. One small but percolating market for us is the offshore wealth market. We now have six CCAV vehicles with $1.2 billion AUM and which have had inflows in 19 of the past 21 quarters. We launched our sixth ETF or excuse me, CCAV sub-fund in the quarter a short duration preferred stock strategy. This strategy's investment universe has attractive attributes with $1.3 trillion in size, and yields of 7.7% duration less than three years, and an average credit rating of triple B. We've had a lot of positive feedback in premarketing and look forward to being in the market. We are making good progress on our private real estate initiative. Cohen & Steers, Inc.'s Income Opportunities REIT or CNS REIT is the top-performing non-traded REIT for the twelve months ended February. CNS REIT returned 13.4% compared with 4.4% for the average non-traded REIT over that period. Among private wealth alternative choices, private credit has been the most popular certainly compared with real estate recently. But we're seeing early signs of caution in credit and emerging interest in the bottoming of the commercial real estate cycle. We continue to work on additional anchor investors while ramping up our engagement with RIAs. We are live on the Schwab, and Fidelity platforms, which provide access to the majority of RIAs. CNS REIT's portfolio now comprises five shopping centers with a mix of power centers and grocery-anchored centers. Shopping centers should be better equipped to defend against a more challenging economy and we still believe they are mispriced considering their fundamentals. The category of expanding our real estate franchise, we expect to launch late in the second quarter, a strategy to provide a better way for institutions to invest in core real estate using both listed and core private real estate. We expect to announce a partnership with a sub-adviser to collaborate on a vehicle designed for institutional real estate allocations which tend to be a larger share of the real estate portfolio. Our aim is to provide better risk-adjusted returns than core private real estate along with better liquidity and broader property sector allocations. Jon and I have been highlighting global listed infrastructure as a strategy that is generating a lot of interest and that began to show in our flows this quarter. We see more behind it with demand from new allocations and takeaways from underperforming managers. Private infrastructure still dominates the allocation landscape but we believe just as in real estate, that listed infrastructure complements private allocations. Resulting in better portfolio construction and performance. Fundamentally, secular trends including digitalization of the world's economies, rebuilding core infrastructure, higher power demand, decarbonization, and deglobalization. Combined are accelerating infrastructure spending, An estimated $94 trillion of infrastructure investment is needed globally by 2040. With more angst about the stickiness of inflation and now tariffs, we're seeing more interest in real assets from the retirement segments, model builders, and target date managers. This is welcome and overdue in my opinion considering the preponderance of financial assets in 401(k) plans. Notably, the private equity firms are pushing for private allocations in these plans. Aside from the plumbing in these plans, which cannot even accommodate ETFs at this point, our view is that private allocations are difficult in 401(k)s, and listed real assets are a smart solution. With our multi-strategy real asset portfolio, for example, 401(k)s can have a single line item turnkey allocation to real assets, and have efficient pricing and daily liquidity. The only potential negative is the perceived volatility compared with private. But given the long-term investment horizon for most retirement savers, volatility should not be a major concern. I will close with a reminder that this year and next, we are focusing on investment in our distribution capabilities with the wealth channel being a high priority and more resources planned for the RIA and multifamily office segment specifically. Our new vehicles and strategies have been designed for these advisors and allocators, which represent the leading investment models in the wealth channel and where AUM is growing the fastest. We look forward to reporting our second quarter results in July. Meantime, please call us with any questions. And now I'll turn the call back to Abby to facilitate Q&A.