You may begin. Welcome to Essex first quarter earnings call. Today, I will cover highlights from the quarter, our near term outlook and provide an update on the investment market. Barb Pak will follow with prepared remarks and Rylan Burns is here for Q&A. We reported a healthy first quarter with core FFO per share exceeding the midpoint of our guidance range. Additionally, we are pleased to start the year with $345 million in acquisitions in Northern California, which were funded by dispositions in Southern California. This reallocation into higher rent growth markets and further optimization of our operating platform will enable us to generate above market returns. Turning to operating highlights. First quarter results trended slightly ahead of plan with 2.8% blended net effective rent growth. And new lease rates improved sequentially from the fourth quarter for the same property portfolio. Two key factors contributed to our performance. First is delinquency improvement to a level close to our historical average, mostly driven by Los Angeles, where delinquency improved to 1.3% of scheduled rent compared to 3.9% for the same period last year. Second, we executed our operating strategy, which contributed to a notably low turnover rate of 35%, while achieving positive new lease rate growth and stable occupancy levels. Great job, Team Essex, on these accomplishments. From a regional perspective, in the first quarter, new lease rates turned positive in all three major regions, led by Northern California at 1.5%, Seattle at 1.3% and Southern California in last place, as expected, at 20 basis points. On a more granular level, San Mateo led the same property portfolio with 4.8% and Oakland lagged with negative 1.2% in new rate growth, primarily due to elevated supply. Fortunately, Oakland has begun to demonstrate incremental improvement as supply abates and concessions moderate. Moving on to the full year outlook. With our solid performance today, under normal circumstances, Essex would consider revising our guidance upward. But lack of clarity on the US and global trade policy have led to macroeconomic uncertainty, including the impact on business investment and job growth. As we navigate this complex environment, we will be nimble with our operating and investment strategy, remain focused on our objective to maximize revenues and to generate long term accretion. Ultimately, the West Coast multifamily fundamental is well positioned for a wide range of economic outcomes. Total new housing supply delivery as a percentage of stock in 2025 is exceptionally low at only 50 basis points in the Essex markets and is expected to moderate throughout the year and to decrease further in 2026. Accordingly, rents should continue to grow even in a low job growth environment. This downside protection is a key reason why our supply constrained markets have outperformed over multiple economic cycles. Furthermore, the cost to own versus to rent remains prohibited at over 2.5 times more expensive. Overall, we remain excited about our portfolio's growth potential as our markets continue to lead in innovation, which provides a solid foundation for economic growth. Concluding with a transaction market update. Deal volume in our markets was higher in the first quarter compared to the same period last year, totaling $2.5 billion with cap rates consistently in the mid to high 4% range. With the onset of broad market volatility in early April, we have limited data points as to the impact of cap rates from ongoing policy changes. However, several deals in our markets have recently been awarded or had contingencies removed, and the valuations have remained consistent with what we've seen over the past year. Our year to date transaction activity has been balance sheet neutral, where we have allocated capital into newer assets in submarkets with the best supply demand fundamentals and rent growth potential. We look forward to more opportunities to continue our expansion and enhance accretion for our shareholders. With that, I'll turn the call over to Barb.