Thanks, Larry, and good morning, everyone. For the third quarter, we are reporting GAAP net income of $0.19 per share on a fully mark-to-market basis and adjusted distributable earnings of $0.40 per share. On slide five, you can see the attribution of net income between credit, agency, and Longbridge. The Credit Strategy generated $0.45 per share of net income in the quarter. Including associated financing costs and hedging gains/losses, we had strong net interest income and net gains from non-QM loans and retained tranches, non-agency RMBS, closed-end second lien loans, and CMBS. We also benefited from mark-to-market gains on our equity investments in LendSure and American Heritage Lending, which reflected strong performance at those originators driven by increased volumes and wider origination margins. Offsetting a portion of these gains were net losses on our consumer loan portfolio and a related equity investment in a consumer loan originator, as well as negative operating income on certain non-performing commercial mortgage loans and REO. Finally, we had a net loss on the Great Ajax common shares we purchased in connection with last year's terminated merger. Meanwhile, despite strong results in originations, the Longbridge segment generated a GAAP net loss of $0.03 per share for the third quarter, but this net loss was driven by interest rate hedges as rates fell during the quarter. We had a mark-to-market gain on our HMBS MSR equivalent, but this gain was muted by wider HMBS yield spreads. So the gain didn't keep pace with the net losses on interest rate hedges that we hold against this position. Wider HMBS yield spreads adversely affect the value of the HMBS MSR equivalent because they lower the component of projected service income that stems from the right to fund and securitize future borrower withdrawals. In HECM originations, a decline in origination margins, also driven by wider HMBS yield spreads, was partially offset by higher volumes. Whereas in prop reverse originations, results were boosted by the securitization we completed in July along with improved origination margins and higher volumes, and this led to strong profits in that product line. In total, origination volume at Longbridge increased 16.5% sequentially even as industry-wide volumes were down overall for the quarter. Notably, Longbridge contributed $0.12 per share of the ADE in the third quarter, driven by the strong quarter from Prop Reverses. For the quarter, our agency strategy generated net income of $0.06 per share, with net gains on our agency RMBS exceeding net losses on interest rate hedges. The quarter, interest rates fell, the yield curve steepened, and agency MBS yield spreads tightened as the market anticipated the beginning of the Federal Reserve's interest rate cutting cycle. Indeed, in September, the Fed reduced the target range for the Fed funds rate by 50 basis points and also released updated projections that implied another 50 basis points of interest rate cuts later in 2024, although that expectation is no longer shared by the market. Finally, our results for the quarter also reflect a net loss on our senior notes driven by the decline in rates. This loss was partially offset by a net gain, also driven by the decrease in interest rates, on the fixed receiver interest rate swaps that we use to hedge the fixed payments on both our unsecured long-term debt and our preferred equity. Turning to slide six, you can see the breakout of ADE by segment. Here's where you can see the $0.12 per share contribution from Longbridge, which drove the overall increase in EFC's ADE to $0.40 per share for the quarter. Turning next to loan credit performance. In our residential mortgage loan portfolio, the percentage of delinquent loans decreased quarter over quarter. In our commercial mortgage loan portfolio, the percentage of delinquent loans increased with four small balance commercial mortgages moving to 90-plus day delinquency during the quarter. But I'll note that subsequent to quarter-end, one of those loans paid off at par plus all past due interest. Two others are expected to resolve favorably in the fourth quarter. And for the fourth, we believe that the property value roughly approximates the UPB. We also continue to work through these two larger non-performing multifamily bridge loans that we referenced last quarter. Moving into next year, we expect that resolutions of delinquent loans in REO, together with redeployment of resolution proceeds, will be a tailwind to ADE. Next, please turn to slide seven. In the third quarter, our total loan credit portfolio increased by 19% to $3.25 billion as of September 30th. The increase was primarily driven by net purchases of non-QM loans, closed-end seconds, HELOCs, commercial mortgage bridge loans, and non-agency RMBS. A portion of the increase was offset by smaller CLO and CMBS work driven by net sales.