Thanks, Chris. Today I'll provide more details about our financial results and key performance drivers, capital liquidity and leverage positions and wrap up with a few additional thoughts on our reinsurance strategy. Overall, F&G's financial performance in the second quarter was strong and builds on our proven track record and we continue to have strong capitalization and financial flexibility to successfully execute our growth strategy. Starting with adjusted net earnings. For the second quarter of 2023, we reported adjusted net earnings of $79 million or $0.63 per share. Our core earnings per share were $1.03, after adjusting for $0.40 per share of unfavorable significant items that are not consistent period-to-period. These significant items include $0.44 per share for alternative investment returns below our long-term expectations, partially offset by $0.04 per share of bond prepay income. For comparison, last year's second quarter adjusted net earnings of $155 million or $1.45 per share included favorable significant items of $0.39 per share. Adjusting for these significant items in both periods, second quarter adjusted net earnings increased by 14% over the prior year. I also wanted to highlight that on July 13, 2023 F&G filed an 8-K to provide investors and analysts with a supplemental disclosure of our 2022 10-K and first quarter financial supplement and investor presentation. This filing revised our prior LDTI accounting standard recast for calculation refinement of F&G's A&E adjustment to remove all market-related movements including the current period for market risk benefit from income. We believe this approach to be in line with peers. This change had a modest favorable benefit to adjusted net earnings, which is reflected in our first half 2023 results and we expect to persist in 2023 in future years. Importantly, F&G has generated consistent economics over time. As Chris mentioned, excluding significant items, F&G has delivered six consecutive quarters of adjusted ROA above 100 basis points, averaging 113 basis points. Now looking at our second quarter results more closely and starting with asset growth, our retained assets under management were $46.3 billion, as of June 30, up from $45.4 billion, as of March 31. This reflects $1.9 billion of net new business asset inflows in the quarter partially offset by $1.1 billion of flow reinsurance outflows. With regard to our inforce book, this quarter we saw outflows from MYGA products right in line with the past couple of quarters. These are predictable cash flows and expected to be lumpy over time depending on contractual maturity dates set at origination. During the second quarter, we also saw fixed indexed annuity outflows for combined surrenders withdrawals and death were slightly elevated as compared to past couple of quarters. Although, not concerning given market conditions and notably we continue to experience strong inflows. Our retail fixed annuities comprised 74% of total net reserves and have policy features which serve as a disincentive for policyholders to surrender early. 91% of our fixed annuities are surrender-protected with an average remaining surrender charge at roughly 7% of account value and approximately 70% of these policies also have market value adjustment protection. Overall, F&G continues to have positive net inflows. And as a reminder, we benefit from a boost to earnings from higher surrender charge fees and freed-up capital from the policy surrenders. And next turning to our disciplined expense management. Over the past three years, F&G has grown diversified and modernized its business, while more than tripling its top-line sales and doubling gross AUM before flow reinsurance. We are disciplined in our expense management approach and focus on our operating expenses relative to growth in sales and assets. To help put it in perspective from 2019 to 2022 we grew gross sales by 43% CAGR and gross assets under management before flow reinsurance by a 21% CAGR. To generate that growth we needed to make significant investments in our operating platform and personnel costs and other operating expenses net of deferred acquisition costs and expense allowances from reinsurance partners increased by a 16% CAGR. Looking ahead, we would expect our variable operating expenses which are roughly about one-third of our cost base will continue to increase generally in line with our growing in-force book as well as gross sales, which are expected to grow at a double-digit click. We also expect that fixed operating expenses which are about two-thirds of our cost base or approximately $200 million on an annual basis will grow at a single-digit growth rate. And we expect that our reinsurance expense allowances or the expense reimbursements that are reported separately under our benefits and other changes in policy reserve line item will increase over time as benefit of cash generation through flow reinsurance to third parties. All-in we expect that our operating costs will continue to grow as we scale and invest in the business albeit at a slower growth rate relative to our gross sales and gross assets under management before flow reinsurance and with the benefit from the reinsurance expense allowances thereby generating operating leverage over time at a continued measured pace. And next turning to interest expense. Our interest expense has increased to $47 million or 21 basis points of ROA in the first six months of 2023 as compared to $17 million or nine basis points of ROA in the first half of 2022. This reflects $515 million drawn on our new revolving credit facility, which was put into place in the fourth quarter of 2022 and $500 million senior note issuance in the first quarter of 2023 as planned to support our future growth and liquidity needs. Our annual interest expense remains approximately $95 million or roughly a 6% blended yield on the $1.6 billion of total debt outstanding. F&G's debt-to-capitalization ratio excluding AOCI was 23% as of June 30 below our long-term target of 25%. Now turning to our balance sheet. We ended the second quarter with a GAAP book value excluding AOCI of $5.1 billion or $40.70 per share with 126 million common shares outstanding as of June 30. There is a page in our investor presentation providing an analysis of book value per share. We continue to target holding company cash and invested assets at two times fixed charge coverage. Our strong capitalization supports growth and distributable cash. During the second quarter, we returned $41 million of capital to shareholders including $25 million of common dividends and $16 million of share repurchases. In the second quarter F&G repurchased approximately 790,000 shares for $16.4 million at an average price of $20.79 per share. Capacity remaining under the $25 million share repurchase authorization was $8.6 million at June 30th 2023. Following yesterday's announcement of the third quarter cash dividend of $0.20 per share, we view our current annual common dividend of approximately $100 million as sustainable. This translates into a dividend yield of approximately 3%, based on F&G's recent market capitalization of approximately $3.5 billion and demonstrates the underlying strength in our business as well as our commitment to creating value for our shareholders. The dividend is reviewed quarterly and expected to increase over time subject to cash flows alternative uses of capital and market conditions. F&G is well positioned to fund its continued growth with positive and growing in-force capital generation available debt capacity as our balance sheet delivers with book value growth overtime and ample opportunities for future reinsurance program. Let me wrap-up with an update on flow reinsurance strategy. As Chris shared last quarter, the ability of our new business platform to generate premiums is attractive to third-party asset managers especially those who are not paired with an insurer, as a means for them to take on asset growth and generate fees from the flow to illustrate the economics for F&G. For every $1 billion of new business flow reinsurance, we free up approximately $75 million of capital to redeploy to the highest returning retained business. This is meaningful and to help put that amount in perspective that is nearly 10% of the estimated $800 million capital generation from our entire in-force block in 2023. Importantly, we expect to grow gross sales at a double-digit clip, while managing net sales to a level that continues to grow our retained AUM. We estimate that we could retain as little as $6 billion to $7 billion of gross sales continue to grow the retained block. In this scenario, as long as sales are well in excess of outflows we are still growing with net inflows albeit, at a smaller spread but with significantly less required capital. Within these parameters during the second half of 2023, we expect to increase our flow reinsurance on MYGA new business from the current 75% level to as much as 90%, by onboarding additional high-quality and established flow reinsurance partners. Importantly, MYGA flow reinsurance provides fee-based earnings while also generating a higher ROE than fully retained sales. Additionally, in contrast to our 100 basis point ROA rule of thumb for fully retained spread-based business for reinsurance sales based on the current economics which could change we would expect to receive approximately one-third of the ROA with proportionately less or about one-fifth of the capital requirement. We are well into execution of our flow reinsurance opportunities for the second half of 2023 and I look forward to providing further details next quarter. This concludes our prepared remarks. And let me now turn the call back to our operator, for questions.