Thank you Rob, and good morning, everyone. As global economy continues to transition to the post pandemic new normal, we have been planning for an evolving environment, bouts of volatility and periods of comp. In the near-term, our risk management framework includes tail risks for modestly higher policy rates and much lower rates overall as well. We remain highly cognizant of geopolitical risks, especially elections here in the United States. We expressed our view last quarter about the unsustainable US fiscal trajectory. This remains a factor in our rates positioning. Therefore, our investment in capital management strategy continues to be designed for a bumpy ride. We remain focused on high quality liquid agency RMBS, which offer compelling long-term risk adjusted returns. Our portfolio is positioned to meet our long-term target returns at today's spread levels. We see bouts of volatility as opportunities to add assets. Spread tightening and eventual fed eases are tailwinds and upside, but they are not necessary for us to generate returns. Agency MBS returns are attractive and accretive today versus our cost of capital. We expected volatility in economic data to be a major factor driving MBS spreads. So far this quarter, we have seen higher volatility versus last quarter, and as a result, our models have option adjusted spreads approximately 15 basis points wider across our portfolio. We remain well off the wides of Agency MBS seen in November 2023 and October 2022. We feel the range of MBS spreads will be narrower going forward as sponsorship for the sector has improved substantially since the fourth quarter 2023 with the return of banks. In addition, it is expected that the Fed will soon be announcing a reduction in the pace of its quantitative tightening campaigns. And while this reduction may not impact MBS directly, any change which adds reserves to the banking system is yet another positive for the sector. We expect that short-term technicals of higher supply will push spreads wider, all else being equal, and this might be exacerbated by market volatility. Over the medium and long-term however, we continue to expect tighter equilibrium spreads for Agency MBS. In the absence of severe disruptions, we would regard any short-term widening as a dip buying opportunity. I'd like to cover our thoughts around capital raising in this environment. All our capital decision making is driven by the same top down macroeconomics based thinking that drives our investment process. Our primary criterion when raising capital is whether we expect to earn a long-term investment return that meets or exceeds the long-term level of the dividend. In today's investment environment, we believe there's a compelling opportunity to earn this type of return in Agency MBS. This is driven by the transition from the risk being housed on public balance sheets like the Fed to private capital like Dynex. In other words, we believe the total economic return from growing and scaling the business in a healthy investment environment exceeds the cost of capital is accretive to shareholders and lays the foundation for the market to put a higher valuation on our unique platform. As always, we stand ready to buy back the stock in extreme disruptions. And here again, we evaluate the marginal return on buybacks versus investments. Every decision has a long-term lens on it. Finally, we believe there are significant strategic benefits to growing the company. Building resilience and scale is an important strategic goal to ensure the longevity of our company. Moreover, factors such as index inclusion can drive additional shareholder return and liquidity in the stock. Our view remains that today's spreads offer compelling returns, enhanced by tighter long-term equilibrium mortgage spreads. We remain focused on delivering long-term total economic return to our shareholders. I'll now turn it over to Byron.