Thank you, Rob and good morning everyone. At a high-level, I'm very excited about the opportunity we're seeing to invest in agency residential mortgage-backed securities. This excitement is tempered with a deep respect for the complexity of the global macroeconomic environment. Let me explain. From a macro perspective, we still frame the environment as evolving and we are seeing a series of transitions occurring in the global economy. Specifically, transitions from pandemic to post-pandemic, disinflation-to-inflation, peacetime-to-wartime, globalization-to de-globalization, dollarization to de-dollarization, non-renewable energy to renewable energy, quantitative easing to quantitative tightening, zero and negative interest rates to positive interest rates, geopolitical or unipolarity to multipolarity and regionalization, automation to artificial intelligence, and many more. This led us to characterize the investing landscape as having a flat scale distribution as we discussed during last quarter's earnings call. Our risk and investment strategy continue to be set in this context. Against this backdrop, we are now seeing the evolution of a historic even generational investment opportunity in the Agency RMBS market. We already believe spreads were attractive last year when they widened in November and then tightened quite substantially in January, but due to the banking turmoil in March, we now have an even more extended opportunity to make investments. As many of you know, the FDIC has engaged BlackRock to sell the assets held by SVB and Signature Bank. These assets totaling $98 billion are in the control of BlackRock's market advisory group and will be sold over the next 9 months. I'll discuss this development alongside my other comments today. So why are we calling this a generational opportunity. Please turn to Page 10 of the earnings deck. This slide shows the history going back to 1985 of current coupon agency MBS nominal spreads hedged assuming an equal mix of five and 10-year treasuries. I want to highlight five periods. The early 1980s, 1998 to 2003, 2007-2008, 2020, and then 2022 through today. These periods represent a major deviation from the average level of MBS spreads and are usually followed by periods of much tighter spreads, even if it takes two to three years. In our view, these are periods during which capital deployment and investment result in outside forward returns and we are right in the middle of one such great opportunity. On the very left-side of the chart, you can see MBS spread spiking as the liquidations rose from the savings and loan crisis. In many ways, we are in a similar situation. Banks are net sellers of mortgages, home prices are falling moderately and private capital dominates the bid for agency MBS. But we are different in two important aspects. First, we don't believe we are in the same scale of crisis atmosphere with continuous large-scale liquidation of the same magnitude. And second, the stock effect of the Fed's MBS holdings, even with quantitative tightening is a powerful stabilizing agent for mortgage spread. You can see that in the post GFC spreads spikes, they're much lower than 2008 or the 1980s because of how big the Fed's balance sheet is. On the very right-hand side of the chart, you can see the dramatic move wider since late 2021 in mortgage spreads, representing a tripling from the levels at lows. We believe that most of the transition to wider spreads in Agency RMBS is now behind us and while spreads may fluctuate and gap wider on occasion spreads today broadly reflect the risk premium that's demanded by private capital and net supply picture from quantitative tightening, seasonal supply, and some but not all of the risk premium for the sales from the FDIC takeover of the failed bank. We expect spreads will remain at wider levels until the bulk of the sales are complete and hence we view this period as extremely beneficial to remain invested and to continue investing. This is not to say that we think no further bank failures can occur or that more sales are unlikely that's still possible. We're simply pointing out that a significant amount of repricing has already occurred. We are of course always contemplating what could take spreads out in 2008 levels. We believe substantial stress in the banking system with forced asset sales could get us there but there are mitigating factors today with bank's ability to tap the discount window and the BTFP, bank term funding program. These things would cushion or slow any type of disruption resulting from such stresses. As I mentioned previously, the stock effect of the Fed's balance sheet is also a stabilizing factor. So the irony of the current situation is that while there does seem to be an immediate opportunity, we are tempering that enthusiasm with a deep respect of the many ways and this situation can actually develop. A final point to note on this slide, is that we have preserved a significant portion of our book value through the bulk of the transition to wider spreads. Book-value was in the $17 range in August of last year and as Rob mentioned, as high as $15.50 in early February. So book-value can arise even with a modest tightening in the spreads. Let me now turn to our positioning and outlook. We remain focused on liquidity and flexibility and the opportunistic deployment of capital. On that, we've been moving our position up in coupon, while also adding assets on weakness, we added a little over $1.1 billion in assets for the quarter at wider spreads in February and March. This took leverage to total and common capital about 1.4x up from year end. We have largely maintained our position and lower coupons 2s and 2.5. They currently make up 20% of assets by fair-value, these remain positively convex assets offering positive spreads to treasuries with prepayment upside relative to both market and model expectations and remain supported by the demand for housing. We are managing our hedge position with a medium-term outlook for rates on the curve. Because of the medium-to-long term inflationary forces we describe on Page 7. We believe that Fed is focused on inflation and in the absence of a significant economic downturn, can continue to look past any moderate economic weakness to maintain the restrictive financial condition needed for inflation to decisively turn towards their 2% target. These factors result in range-bound yields at the long-end of the yield curve, which also provides solid fundamental support for tightening of the mortgage basis once the supply shock of the FDIC sales go through the system. At today's level of mortgage spreads were more focused on the mortgage basis as the major source of alpha generation, as opposed to curve and rates positioning on hedges. We see opportunity to add assets across the coupon stack and would favor adding both current coupons and discounts based on relative value at the time, preserving some flexibility with TBA and selectively investing in pools. I'll briefly cover what we know about the FDIC sales and our expectations for how conditions may evolve. The total amount of securities to be sold is $98 billion, $55 of which are Agency and Ginnie Mae securities and 43 billion CMOs. The first sales happened last week, about $1 billion. Mortgage spreads did widen in response and the sales are expected to ramp-up to $1.5 billion to $2 billion per week. This should last about 25 weeks if they keep up the current pace. So we expect this to-end sometime in October. We also expect concurrent sales of the CMOs to begin in about two weeks. These are expected to bring duration and hedging flows into the market that will further impact rates and spreads. All told, we estimate the duration equivalent of 69 billion tenures will be sold, over half of which is in the path through bucket. Over the course of these sales, we expect to find opportunities to deploy capital at attractive levels. So what can shareholders expect from us. As I've said, this is a very accretive investment environment, by which I mean, the return on capital, exceeds our dividend yield. We expect to be active and opportunistic and better. We can reallocate existing capital, raise and deploy capital as well as raise leverage, all three remain very powerful options and comprise significant upside over the long-term as we outlined on Slide 12. In the medium-term as Rob mentioned, we expect bullish support for Agency MBS spreads to come from any decline in delivered volatility, the relative attractiveness of the agency guaranteed cash-flow offering significantly turns over treasuries, as well as on a risk-adjusted basis versus credit-sensitive investments. We remain highly respectful of the global macro situation when looking ahead to the debt ceiling, which we believe can be a major risk flash point and we are planning accordingly. A final point, going back to the spread slide on Page 10. I wanted to highlight Dynex's performance. We began our existence in current form in January 2008 at the beginning of the great financial crisis. Between 2008 and 2019, we generated a cumulative total economic return of 106%. From 2020 to 2022 this decade Dynex has delivered industry-leading performance outpacing our peer group of Agency and hybrid rates by an average of 28% and 52% respectively on a cumulative basis. We're excited about the prospect of a target-rich investment landscape to put the power of the Dynex team to work, our demonstrated performance in managing transitions is the direct result of having the experience, skill-set, mindset, and expertise to navigate exactly this type of environment. With that, I will turn it back to Byron.