Thank you for joining us today for our first quarter 2024 results conference call. We had strong first quarter results with revenue towards the higher end of our guidance range and adjusted EBITDA that exceeded our guidance range and with our agents continuing to outperform the market. I am pleased to say that in Q1 2024 in a historically challenged market and the slowest quarter of the year, Compass generated positive free cash flow. This proves that our focus on cost reductions and cash generation, while still investing in agent growth in our proprietary technology platform are working. We grew revenue considerably. In Q1 2024, we generated an increase in revenue of 10% year-over-year as we increased transactions 7.1% from a year ago. This compares favorably to the 3.5% decline in transactions for an entire market in the first quarter. We grew market share considerably. In Q1 2024, our quarterly market share increased 26 basis points year-over-year and 35 basis points on a sequential basis compared to Q4 2023. This is a testament to our agent productivity, which is further enhanced by a proprietary technology platform. I have shared repeatedly that Compass has the best agents in the industry and they are demonstrating their skill and experience navigating this difficult market. We continue to grow our agent base considerably. Our principal agent count has increased by nearly 1,000 agents between Q1 2023 and Q1 2024. This is a 7.3% increase, which is in stark contrast to industry trends. The vast majority of agents that come to Compass tell us that the platform is the number one reason that they join. Originally, we organically in Q1 2024, we recruited 518 principal agents, the highest quarterly count since we ceased using cash and equity sign-on bonuses. Just last month in April, we added more than 1,000 principal agents with our accretive acquisition of Latter & Blum, the largest agency in the Gulf South and New Orleans. We are growing total agents faster than the market. At Compass, the number of total agents increased 2.1% year-over-year, while our three largest public company competitors by agent count reported decreases of 2%, decreases of 5%, and decrease of 6% in the same period. Moreover, this includes a reduction of over 1,000 non-productive agents in the last two quarters. As a reminder, Latter & Blum is not in these numbers. Our balance sheet is strong. We ended Q1 with $165 million in cash and cash equivalents and no outstanding draws on our credit facility. We continue to drive cost improvements internally. We remain laser focused on driving efficiencies and reducing costs using technology. These improvements are also positively contributing to free cash flow. We reduced our OpEx in the first quarter to $211 million, an increase of $32 million from Q1 2023 OpEx of $243 million. We also reduced OpEx sequentially from Q4 2023 OpEx of $224 million. As always, Kalani, our Chief Financial Officer, will walk you through the financials later on this call. Moving on to the market, I still believe 2024 will be better than 2023 and that 2025 will be better than 2024, with the mid-cycle coming in 2026. My opinion is influenced by the following. One, inventory is up 33% from a year ago. More inventory leads to more sales. Two, the percentage of all cash homebuyers is at the highest level in over 2 years, with the stock market nearing all-time high. Homebuyers are less reliant on mortgages. Three, the percentage of sellers with 4% mortgage rates or below is approaching 50% after dropping from approximately 75% at the peak. At this rate, we believe in 2 years, only approximately 25% of people may still have 4% mortgage rates or below, nearly eliminating the biggest bottleneck to the mid-cycle real estate market. And four, we now have over 2 years of pent-up demand assuming 2024 is just modestly better than 2023. This will end up being a 3-year housing downturn, forcing many people to live and remain in homes that they don’t want to be in. We believe when rates come down, it will create a massive surge in transactions. The longer this lasts, the stronger the market bounce back will be. As I mentioned on the last call, assuming we continue to add net agents annually, maintain or modestly improve our agent economics and keep our $600 million of annual cost savings with minimal inflationary growth of 3% to 4% in 2025 and beyond, we believe that is a formula for generating hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars in adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow as the market recovers to a more normalized mid-cycle annual home sales level of 5.4 million to 5.6 million homes. But in the meantime, as I mentioned on our last earnings call, we have conservatively budgeted for a flat year on transactions and have brought our OpEx to that level. We expect to be free cash flow positive in 2024, even after the cost of the first payment related to our litigation settlement, which we agreed to in April ‘24 and which we expect to make in the second quarter. The number one question we are getting from investors is, what is the settlement having on the business? What effect is it having? To help with this question, let me share with you five facts as well as five beliefs. Let’s start with the facts. One, buyers are using buyer agents now more than ever. In 2023, 89% of buyers use an agent, which is up from 75% just 20 years ago in 2003. Two, buyer agreements are not new and are already required in half of the states in which Compass operates. Thousands of Compass agents have been getting buyer representation agreements signed for years with no issue. Three, 90% of our agents have been trained and are prepared for the rules. Since the verdict, we have provided our agents with 57 national training sessions and hundreds of local training sessions. With these efforts, I have seen our agents transition from initially being worried to now being confident. Four, per NAR and RealTrends, commissions were 5.5% in 2023 that compares to 5.1%, just 20 years earlier in 2003. Five, the industry has not seen a noticeable change in either the percentage of sellers that offer a buyer agent’s commission, nor in the average commission amount they are paying the buyer’s agent. We reviewed the MLS data in the markets generating the majority of our revenue since the announcement of the NAR settlement on March 15. Here is what we found. More than 99% of new listings since March included offers to pay the buyer agent. Furthermore, more than 96% of all listings included offers to pay 2% or more and more than 67% are offering to pay 2.5% or more. To-date, we are not hearing from agents that any of these numbers are coming down. We believe the sensational press has caused significantly more reaction than what we expect to see from the actual rule changes. Specifically, the headlines since the March 15 NAR settlement have led to sellers asking if they need to pay a buyer agent more than ever before. And the result of those conversations is that sellers felt more than 99% of the time that it was still in their interest to provide a commission to buyer’s agents. Now, here are some of our beliefs after conversations with hundreds of our agents across the country. One, we believe there will be little impact on the professional full-time agents. And Compass is composed of experienced full-time agents with very strong repeat and referral business. Two, we believe that agents will increasingly need to be able to sell their brokerages value proposition to communicate that to buyers. And that Compass has the best value proposition for buyers of any brokerage firm. For example, Compass has access to off-market inventory through Compass private exclusives and Compass coming soon, which is particularly important in a low inventory environment. Another example being buyer technology tools like Compass collections, like Compass digital tour sheets, like Compass CNA and the client dashboard launching in less than a year. Three, we believe real estate agents are project managing a highly complex, multi-month process where they can often be coordinating between over a dozen different parties, loan officers, title officers, home inspectors, home appraisers, painters, stagers, photographers, videographers, agents on the other side and so on. We do not believe this important role will be displaced or discounted. Four, we believe the percentage of buyers and sellers that will use an agent will continue to be at the 90% level. Buying and selling a home is the biggest financial decision that most people make in their lifetime. However, for decades, people have been declaring that there will be a decline in the use of the real estate agent. In the last 20 years, since the rise of the internet, we have seen so many attempts to replace the agent, such as for sale by owner companies and then you had the Aggregators and then you had the Discounters, then you have the iBuyers and then the Power Buyers. Yet despite all of these attempts to disrupt the real estate agent, buyers and sellers are using agents more than ever before. In the last 20 years, the percentage of buyers using an agent has increased from 75% in 2003 to 89% in 2023. And finally, we believe the vast majority of buyers and sellers prefer to pay for value over receiving a discount. If saving money on commissions was the most important thing to a seller, the majority of home sales would be for sale by owner. Obviously, that is not the case. In every market we know of, there are countless agents and brokerages that offer low commission rates. Discounters are not new and have been operating the market for decades. Many of these discount firms have either gone out of business or have not gained traction. In fact, one of the largest public companies in residential real estate today is a professional discounter, offering the majority of the country discounted commissions with salaried agents for decades. This company can go to every seller and say, we have more than 50 million visitors on our site a month. More internet exposure than every other brokerage firm in the country combined for your listing. And we only charge 1%. However, after 20 years of offering discounts, they have only 0.8% market share. That is the proof that buyers and sellers are speaking with their checkbooks in that they prefer professional advice over a discount. In closing, I believe Compass is approaching an inflection point. We have done the hard work. We have brought expenses down and continue to grow our agent count and inventory advantage. The market will inevitably come back. And when the Fed cuts rates, we will be in a position to thrive. I want to thank the entire Compass team of employees and agents. I see their commitment to making Compass successful with their incredible dedication and determination. It has allowed us to be named the number one real estate brokerage by sales volume in the United States for 3 years in a row and to have a strong foundation for the future. I will now pass it over to Kalani.