Thanks, Chris. We are pleased with F&G's overall financial performance for the full year, and we continue to maintain strong capitalization and financial flexibility to successfully execute our growth strategy. Adjusted net earnings for the full year 2023 were $335 million or $2.68 per share and included $405 million or $3.24 per share of investment income from alternative investments and $51 million or $0.41 per share of other significant expense items. Alternative investments, investment income based on management's long-term expected return of approximately 10% was $558 million or $4.46 per share. Adjusted net earnings for the full year 2022 were $353 million or $3.07 per share and included $202 million or $1.75 per share of investment income from alternative investments and $99 million or $0.86 per share of other significant income items. Alternative investments, investment income based on management's long-term expected return of approximately 10% was $419 million or $3.64 per share. For comparison, adjusting for these significant items in both periods, adjusted net earnings were $539 million in full year 2023, up 14% from $471 million in full year 2022 and reflect asset growth, product margin expansion and accretive flow reinsurance fees partially offset by an increase in interest expense due to planned capital market activity and higher operating costs in line with our growth in sales and assets and continued investments in our operating platform. Adjusted return on assets was 117 basis points in full year 2023, above our 110 basis point forecast and in line with 118 basis points in the prior year. Excluding significant items, adjusted return on equity, excluding AOCI, was 10.4% in 2023 as compared to approximately 9.6% in 2022. Next, turning to the results for the quarter. Adjusted net earnings for the fourth quarter of 2023 were $75 million or $0.60 per share and included $110 million or $0.88 per share of investment income from alternative investments and $19 million or $0.15 per share of other significant expense items comprised of $9 million unfavorable actuarial industry assumption update and $10 million onetime fixed asset impairment charge. Alternative investment income based on management's long-term expected return of approximately 10% and was $147 million or $1.18 per share. Adjusted net earnings for the fourth quarter of 2022 were $130 million or $1.04 per share and included $41 million or $0.32 per share of investment income from alternative investments and $58 million or $0.46 per share of significant income for a onetime tax benefit from carryback of capital losses. Alternative investments, investment income based on management's long-term expected return of approximately 10% was $113 million or $0.90 per share. For comparison, adjusting for these significant items in both periods, adjusted net earnings were $131 million in the fourth quarter 2023, down 9% from $144 million in fourth quarter of 2022 and reflect modest product margin expansion due to inherent timing lag between the precipitous decline in rates and our pricing actions in the fourth quarter of 2023 and accretive flow reinsurance fees, which were more than offset by higher interest expense due to planned capital market activity and higher operating costs in line with our growth in sales and assets and continued investments in our operating platform. Turning to reported net income on a GAAP basis. We reported $299 million net loss in the fourth quarter of 2023 and a $58 million net loss in 2023 for full year. This result is primarily driven by unfavorable mark-to-market movement, which is excluded from adjusted net earnings. We view the short-term mark-to-market movements as point in time, accounting-driven and not economic. Given adequate liquidity levers, we do not expect to sell securities and realize losses to meet corporate liquidity needs. To recap, despite some volatility in our earnings in the fourth quarter, our full year performance, nonetheless, builds on our proven track record over successive years and demonstrates progress towards our targeted value creation levers of asset growth, margin expansion and enhanced earnings from flow reinsurance. I'd now like to provide additional perspective on the volatility that we encountered this past year. From a retention perspective in 2023, we saw predictable outflows from our MYGA fixed rate annuities, which are aligned to the contractual maturity date set at origination. For fixed indexed annuities, we have seen elevated surrenders this year, although offset by higher inflows. This was expected given the spike in new money rates that the industry hasn't seen in over a decade, which can spur consumer demand to surrender their annuities for new policies under 1035 exchanges. We generated very strong positive net inflows in 2023, given our record new business volumes, which restart the surrender charge period, further improving liability profile. And our in-force annuity account balance continues to steadily grow on both a quarterly and annual basis. As a reminder, for insurance companies like F&G, surrenders typically provide a boost to earnings from the higher surrender charge fees and freed up capital from the policy lapse. Importantly, our new business and in-force are actively managed to maintain pricing targets over time. That being said, we can expect pockets of market volatility. During the fourth quarter, we saw some margin compression from the interest rate volatility that the annuities industry experienced as rates fell dramatically through the end of the year and consumers rush to lock in rates, creating a dynamic environment for crediting rates and strategy. We were disciplined and actively managed to maintain new business pricing targets. However, there are expected timing lags between precipitous rate movements and our pricing actions for both new business pricing and annual in-force renewal rate setting. This is not the first time we have navigated these issues. And in our experience, we view the resulting quarterly volatility as a blip given the rapid movement in rates. There is no change in our economics or expectation for 2024 margins. And the long-term outlook for our business remains unchanged. We are positioned to sustain our product margin in a variety of interest rate and economic environments. Our proven track record in recent years demonstrates that we can profitably grow the business and maintain consistent pricing in any rate and spread environment, whether peak or trough. Next, I'd like to provide an update on our own distribution strategy. During 2023, our own distribution stakes increased throughout the year from approximately $20 million to $260 million. Notably, this excludes the majority ownership stake in a life and annuity wholesaler that we closed in January of 2024 for approximately $270 million that Chris mentioned earlier. We are working on enhancements to our financial supplement for the first quarter 2024 to reflect the emerging performance of owned distribution on a GAAP reporting basis, which we expect to provide fee-based earnings and higher returns over time. Now turning to our balance sheet. We ended the year with a GAAP book value, excluding AOCI, of $5.1 billion or $40.42 per share, with 126 million common shares outstanding as of December 31. There is a page in our investor presentation providing an analysis of book value per share. F&G's debt-to-capitalization ratio, excluding AOCI, was 25.7% as of December 31. This is in line with our long-term target of 25% and excludes the $250 million preferred stock issuance in January 2024. During 2023, we successfully executed on two senior note issuances, including a $345 million issuance in December and $500 million issuance in January 2023, with proceeds used to support AUM growth and a revolver partial paydown. On February 16, 2024, we entered into an amended and restated credit agreement, which included an increase to the size of the facility commitments to $750 million from $665 million and extended the maturity of the facility by two years to November of 2027, thereby enhancing our liquidity profile and financial flexibility. The outstanding balance is $365 million, which reflects a $150 million pay down in the fourth quarter. In 2023, our interest expense was $97 million or 21 basis points of adjusted ROA as compared to $29 million or 7 basis points of adjusted ROA in 2022, as expected and in line with our capital markets activity over the last 12 months. Our annualized interest expense is approximately $120 million or roughly 6.8% blended yield on the $1.8 billion of total debt outstanding. We continue to target holding company cash and invested assets at 2x fixed charge coverage. Our strong capitalization supports both growth and distributable cash. During 2023, F&G returned $119 million of capital to shareholders, including $101 million of common dividends and $18 million of share repurchases. During the year, we repurchased approximately 870,000 shares at an average cost per share of $21.07. On November 7, we expended the capacity of the share repurchase program from $25 million to $50 million. The remaining authorization yet to be purchased under the program was $32 million as of December 31 to take advantage of future market dislocation. On February 15, 2024, we declared a $0.21 per share dividend payable on March 29 to the stockholders of record as of March 15. As Chris mentioned earlier, FNF's recent investment in F&G will accelerate the growth of our retained AUM, given the current market opportunity. Here's a few points. On January 16, 2024, FNF and F&G announced the closing of a $250 million mandatory convertible preferred stock investment issued by F&G Annuities & Life, our top holding company to FNF. F&G intends to use net proceeds from the investment to support growth of its assets under management. A portion of the proceeds will be held to fund the 6-7/8% preferred dividend, which is subject to declaration by the Board of Directors. The preferred dividends can be paid in either cash or common shares. If dividends are deferred until the mandatory conversion date in 2027, the cumulative payment of dividends will be converted into common shares. On February 15, 2024, we declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.8976 per share on its preferred stock held by FNF. On a pro forma basis, our year-end 2023 debt to capitalization ratio, excluding AOCI, would be 24.8% based on current debt outstanding, including the new preferred stock as equity. Going forward, we would expect to conform our earnings presentation to report net earnings available to common shareholders and adjusted net earnings available to common shareholders. Now moving on to our strong statutory capital position. As expected, we ended the year with a strong and stable capital position, having an estimated company action level, risk-based capital or RBC ratio of approximately 440% for our primary operating subsidiary in line with the prior year and providing a buffer well above our 400% target Notably, our RBC ratio as of December 31 excludes net proceeds of the $250 million preferred stock investment from FNF in January of 2024. F&G is well positioned to self-fund its continued growth with positive and growing in-force capital generation, available debt capacity as our balance sheet delevers with book value growth over time and ample opportunities for future reinsurance programs. We expect to be active in the capital markets in 2024 to fund our growth, to pay down our revolver and debt maturities. We also expect our stable profitable in-force to generate more than $1 billion in capital. Let me now turn the call over to Chris to wrap up.