Thank you, George and good afternoon everyone. With the press release and slide deck, you should have all the necessary financial numbers and metrics. Let me provide some qualitative commentary about each segment to help you better understand the quarter and what’s going on in the business. Turning first to the Consumer Services segment comprised of our retail and direct-to-consumer channels. Like prior quarters, aggregate revenue declines largely remain a function of the decrease in active accounts in both channels. As a reminder, the declines are driven by very distinct dynamics within each channel as well as a small amount of stimulus benefit that still had a lingering impact in the early part of the fourth quarter that we believe is now fully behind us. I covered the unique channel dynamics last quarter and I will quickly repeat those today. We believe our retail channel is facing headwinds associated with a secular change in consumer foot traffic and the competitive environment as consumers now have numerous direct-to-consumer options. In our direct channel, the declines are driven by two factors. First, we made a very deliberate decision at the beginning of 2021 to deemphasize legacy brands while we invest solely in the GO2bank brand from scratch. Second, we pulled back our marketing spend for GO2bank in the first half of 2022, which had a negative impact on account growth plans for 2022. With the natural attrition of the legacy brands and muted first half marketing spend overall accounts are down year-over-year in our direct channel. That said we put the marketing dollars back to work, while many of our competitors have pulled back and we are encouraged by what we are seeing in the GO2bank brand as we exited the year. Now turning to the results and some color around the metrics and performance. The year-over-year decline in active accounts moderated a bit in the fourth quarter as we have essentially lapped the impact of stimulus payments in 2021. The sequential year-over-year improvement came from our direct channel as we are able to put the marketing dollars back to work in the second half of 2022. The year-over-year decline in revenue in the consumer segment also moderated in the fourth quarter. As we see the rate of decline in actives moderate, we are also seeing encouraging trends in the average revenue per active account and associated metrics like GDV and purchase volume per active account. For the consumer segment, revenue per active account was up 15% both in the quarter and for the full year in both direct and retail posting double-digit growth. The growth in revenue per active account remains driven in part by the retention of accounts that are more highly engaged and drive more volumes as well as continued growth in our overdraft product. I would also like to point out that there is a favorable shift in our account mix between direct and retail. The direct channel is now approximately 30% of revenue in the consumer segment versus 24% at year end 2020 prior to our launch of GO2bank. Direct accounts have higher GDV and purchase volume and a direct deposit attach rate that is approximately 10x that of retail channels, resulting in more favorable economics. As the direct business becomes a larger part of the consumer segment, it should continue to be positive for revenue per active account. Turning to segment profit and margins, while revenue was down double-digits, segment profit in the fourth quarter was down just slightly year-over-year. We continue to work diligently to manage the cost structure in the retail business relative to its revenue trajectory, while still being able to invest in key initiatives with our retail partners. Overall, the entire consumer segment continues to benefit from improvement in areas such as customer care and risk as well as growth from our overdraft product. As a result, margins were up in both channels, although to a lesser extent in our direct channel, as we continue to invest in growth of GO2bank. And I will maybe provide a bit more color and insight into the performance of the direct channel. As I mentioned earlier, the decline in revenue and accounts is a function of a deliberate strategy to focus on building the GO2bank brand and deemphasize legacy brands. As a result, the growth of GO2bank is more than offset by the attrition in legacy portfolio. However, as we have mentioned on our last call, we are encouraged by what we are seeing in this channel, which comprises 30% of the overall consumer segment revenue. Since being launched in January 2021, GO2bank has gone from literally contributing nothing to representing approximately 45% of direct channel revenue in 2022. Revenue generated from GO2bank was up 80% in 2022 from double-digit growth in both active accounts and direct deposit accounts. It’s a dynamic market and we are still early in the journey, but we remain encouraged by what we see with GO2bank, its potential impact on the direct channel and the overall consumer segment in the coming years. Now, let me turn to the B2B segment, which is comprised of our BaaS and PayCard channels. Revenue growth was driven by BaaS and PayCard, while margins remain impacted by certain BaaS contracts that have a fixed profit component. Growth of one of our large BaaS customers continues to power the top line in the BaaS channel, while the remaining portion of the business is still lapping the deconversion of a customer in early 2022, which also accounts for the bulk of the year-over-year decline in active accounts. Additionally, in the fourth quarter, we started to observe the roll-off of accounts from the non-renewal BaaS partners that we previously announced. In our PayCard channel, we continue to experience strong year-over-year growth in active accounts, GDV and purchase volume. As we have indicated in prior calls, the impact of the BaaS fixed profit structure continues to weigh on the aggregate segment margin. If we look at the rest of the segment excluding these arrangements, margins remain quite healthy, including margin expansion in the BaaS channel as we continue to see improvement in areas such as customer care, risk management and supply chain. The PayCard business had margin compression during the quarter from lower interchange rates due to the mix shift and higher ticket sizes, coupled with lower ATM fees and higher costs to support the solid growth in accounts and volume. We saw some of these trends reverse in January 2023. Now, let me turn to the money movement segment, which is comprised of our tax processing business and the Green Dot Network, which serves our own account base, but is seeing an increasing amount of volume in third-party partners. Overall revenue in the segment was down year-over-year from the decline in cash transfer volume to the Green Dot Network, principally from the impact of a decline in active accounts in our other segments, while tax revenue was very modest in the quarter due to the seasonal nature of the business. The rate of cash transfer declines for the Green Dot Network is less than our active account base as this channel is seeing momentum from growth in new and existing partners. The pace of decline has been moderating. And on a sequential basis, transaction volumes and revenue have been reasonably consistent throughout the year, which is encouraging. Transactions from third-party programs had quarter-to-quarter growth throughout the year and now represent just over 50% of total transactions versus 45% in 2021 and 33% back in 2019. As we said before, we believe the Green Dot Network is a unique asset that is under monetized and other entities, some of which you may view as our competitors see the value in joining this network in providing convenient cash in, cash out access to their customers. Despite the decline in revenue, segment margins were up across both channels. It’s worth pointing out that the margin expansion for the full year was driven by the Green Dot Network division, while tax margins remain consistent. Our final segment, Corporate & Other, reflects the interest income we earn in our bank, net of the revenue share on interest we pay to our BaaS partners as well as salaries and administrative costs and some smaller intercompany adjustments. For the quarter, interest income, net of partner interest sharing, was up year-over-year from the increased yields on our cash and investment portfolio. As a reminder, our investment portfolio represents two-thirds of the interest-earning assets on our balance sheet. The average yield on that portfolio in the fourth quarter was approximately 185 basis points. Meanwhile, our cash earned an overnight rate of approximately 370 basis points. We have arrangements with certain partners that result in us sharing a substantial portion of the overnight rate on the associated deposits. Given our mix of investments in cash that means we are paying out a higher rate on revenue share than we are earning on those deposits. It takes time for our investments to roll off and as overnight rates rise, so does the pressure on the net earnings of interest. With respect to salaries and general and administrative expenses, we were roughly flat year-over-year. Salaries and related compensation were down, while expenses tied to our technology transformation were up. Before turning to guidance, I also want to let you know that we intend to post an investor deck to our IR website in the near future. This deck presents 4 years of annual data not only for our three main operating segments, but the six divisions that make up those segments. We believe this should be informative and help investors better understand the dynamics, economics and trends in the business. This information will only be updated annually. So I intend to continue to provide color each quarter on the various segments and divisions. Now, I would like to turn to our guidance. As George mentioned in his opening comments, we are disappointed with our guidance and we are working diligently to ensure that we position the company for growth in 2024 and beyond. As George mentioned, our guidance for fiscal year 2023 is a revenue range of $1.38 billion to $1.46 billion, adjusted EBITDA in the range of $180 million to $190 million, and non-GAAP EPS of $1.77 to $1.93. I will discuss guidance in three areas. First, I will give color on 2023 and the moving parts. So you can have some clarity about how we think about the opportunity to elevate core earnings power beyond 2023. Second, I will provide color around the outlook in terms of its cadence throughout the year and how we think about the segments. Last, I will touch upon guidance and communication policies on a go forward basis to ensure we are consistent with our communications to the market. With respect to 2023, our guidance reflects a reduction in adjusted EBITDA of approximately $55 million at the midpoint. There are a handful of discrete factors that really drive this decline and we believe that several of them have a path to resolution as we exit the year and headed to 2024. My comments are not intended to provide guidance for 2024. But we know that many analysts and investors tend to build out estimates over a 2-year period. This commentary is intended to help you understand some of the major puts and takes between 2022 and 2023 that can help inform you as you think about building out your models for 2024. The first headwind is the loss of two BaaS partners and the non-renewal of a program in retail. In aggregate, these loss programs represent a revenue and EBITDA headwind of approximately $90 million and $40 million respectively, split roughly in half between our B2B and consumer segments. We have one sizable new partner BaaS coming on in 2023 and the prospective revenue and earnings should replace what is being lost over time. However, we only get a small portion of this in 2023 and a greater benefit in 2024 as this new program ramps up. Second is the timing of cost savings from our technology conversions. Timing and the realization is being pushed back 2 months versus our prior thinking. However, our thinking has not changed on the annualized cost savings, while we’re pushing our 2023 cost savings back a bit further in the year. We still expect to realize incremental savings in 2024. Last is the impact on interest rates. As I mentioned previously, we earn net interest income off our cash in investments. And we also share with certain BaaS partners a substantial portion of the overnight rate on the associated deposits, with the short end of the curve moving up fast and our investment portfolio running off slowly. The amount we pay out the assuring arrangements is growing at a much faster rate than the amount we are earning. This has resulted in pressure on the net interest income that falls to our bottom line. As a result, we now face a headwind between $15 million to $20 million in 2023. Assuming that the Fed is reasonably close to the end of its rate hikes, future hikes being more moderate than what we’ve seen in the second half of 2022. The growth rate of what we pay out will also moderate. Over time, our investment strategy will balance out this headwind. In summary, we believe there’s a past result some of the headwinds that we faced this year. We are successful in executing the operating plan that George outlined, we expect to exit 2023 with visibility to higher level of core earnings power in 2024 and beyond. Now, the details on the primary headwinds, I’ll provide context on how we currently expect the year to unfold to help you with models. On a consolidated basis, we expect slight declines in revenue for each of the first three quarters and the possibility of a bit of growth in the fourth quarter. While we face headwinds, as I discussed previously, we continue to look for growth in other parts of the business, including onboarding new partners to minimize the revenue impact. We are slated to onboard a large BaaS partner in the second quarter, as well as numerous other small partners across the business. These programs will contribute to accounts revenue and earnings modestly as they begin to ramp throughout the second half of the year. Looking at adjusted EBITDA about two-thirds of EBITDA will occur in the first half of the year and one-third in the second half generally in line with our seasonal patterns. I’d like to point out that Q1 should represent a higher percentage of the first half earnings than we typically see. Considering the loss partner programs, our tax processing business will likely become a larger percentage of our Q1 earnings. Of course, this is contingent on the IRS and the timing of regional payment. From a margin perspective, we believe the first three quarters could have notable declines and the fourth quarter roughly flat, the impact of our reduced marketing in the first half of 2022 and subsequent investment in the second half will play a part in margin mix across the year, particularly in the second quarter of 2023. Additionally, you may remember that in 2022, the first two to three quarters benefited from very focused efforts on our part to work with vendors to reduce a variety of costs, as well as the notable improvement in risk in customer care. We believe the fourth quarter of 2023 will benefit from our cost reduction efforts and have more normalized comparisons versus the first three quarters. Now turning to segments. In the Consumer segment, the continued secular trends in retail combined with the loss of a retail program will create a headwind in 2023. We anticipate full year revenue to decline in the low double digits reasonably consistent throughout the year. We are encouraged by the growth of GO2bank and the direct channel and we believe you will see modest full year revenue growth in this channel is GO2bank begins to outweigh the decline in the legacy brands. Segment profit is expected to be down in the low to mid-teens with margin compression, particularly in the second and third quarters. Turning to the B2B segment, we expect revenue growth in the high single digits. continued growth from our PayCard channel, growth from our remaining BaaS partners and the onboarding of the new BaaS partner offset the loss of the two BaaS partners that began to roll off in late Q4. Our bass business should see upper single digit growth and revenue while we look for PayCard to see growth in the upper teens. Despite the modest revenue growth, actives will be down sharply for the year with the most pronounced declines in the first half from the two BaaS partners we lost. Before moderating in the second half, our new BaaS partner begins to ramp. Segment profits is expected to be down mid single-digits, most pronounced in the first half of the year and a moderate decline in the second half of the year. In our Money Movement segment, we estimate revenue growth in the low single-digits reversing 2 years of declines. The Green Dot Network business is expected to have modest growth as third-party volumes continue to grow. And we anticipate our tax processing channel to have a good year and continue to enjoy the low single-digit organic revenue growth as they have become accustomed to. Segment profit is anticipated to be flattish with margin compression coming from our tax business as the borrowing cost of taxpayer advances has increased in 2023. In our Corporate & Other segment, the interest income dynamic comes into play. As I mentioned, the headwind this year is in the range of $15 million to $20 million and that will be reflected in the revenue of this segment with the partial offset coming from our cost reduction efforts. In our full year EPS guidance, we expect our non-GAAP effective tax rate to be 23.5% and the diluted weighted average share count to be approximately 52 million shares. Last thing I’d like to briefly address is our guidance policy. We want to be helpful and make sure that investors understand our business and we recognize that guidance is an important part of the relationship. There have been different approaches utilized in the past several years, we believe it’s important to have a consistent approach going forward, one that has a clear focus on the full year’s results. Like any other public company, near-term decisions, such as marketing spend, and other initiatives can impact a quarter and create noise from one quarter to the next. As such, our policy will revise full year non-GAAP revenue adjusted EBITDA and non-GAAP EPS ranges, while providing appropriate commentary and color about the quarters and how the U.S. expected progress. With that, I’ll hand it back over to George.