Thank you, Jess. We'd now like to spend some time discussing the proposed consent order, the individual characteristics of our distribution channels and describe how they each tie into our strategy and my corporate goals and priorities for 2024. As I noted at the outset, we have been in ongoing discussions with the Federal Reserve regarding a proposed consent order. The proposed order relates principally to various aspects of compliance risk management, including consumer compliance, as well as compliance with anti-money laundering regulations. The matters addressed in the proposed order relate to activities and practices that commenced prior to our CEO transition in 2020 and they back to 2017. We do not currently expect any incremental restrictions to be placed on our business or operations. However, until the order is finalized, I am not able to comment on its specific elements. I will say this, we take regulatory compliance very seriously, and we have invested considerably in people in time, and process improvement and product improvement and in money to improve our capabilities in this regard. We are not the same management team or the same company that we were in 2017. We have changed our culture throughout the organization to ensure our policies, programs, services, and people make regulatory compliance our top priority, our North Star. We are not now nor will we ever be done as we have adopted an approach of continuous improvement, and we are now making and will continue to make those improvements. Our core value is stewardship. We hold customer deposits as stewards and must take care of those deposits. We provide a unique service to the American economy given the wide range of clients we serve. We provide access to FDIC insured bank accounts to millions of Americans who are otherwise blocked from accessing traditional banking services as well as providing services to our BaaS clients. Our commitment to this value will not waiver, and we will work to ensure this does not happen again. Now, I'm going to spend some time discussing our business and strategy in a bit more detail than we typically do to help the market understand the distinct assets we own and how we see their long-term prospects as we weave them together. Sitting at the center of our universe is an FDIC insured demand deposit or DDA account. We distribute DDA accounts directly to consumers and through retail partners in our consumer segment and in a business-to-business to consumer model in our B2B segment. You all know DDA accounts receive particular regulatory protections and are the enabler through which most U.S. financial transactions flow. We tailor our DDA accounts to meet the unique needs of customers in two of our reported segments, consumer and business to business. Let me break each of these segments down so that you understand the underlying business opportunities. In our Consumer segment, comprised of our retail and direct business, our retail channel has been the DNA of Green Dot and is our largest channel accounting for approximately 23% of revenue in 2023 and generally operates at what I would consider to be attractive margins. Within this channel, we distribute to traditional retailers like Walmart, CVS and Walgreens and to Financial Services Centers or FSC, similar to Community Choice Financial or PLS. Green Dot is the market dominant leader in the distribution of DDA and related products and services in retail, and we work with over 75% of major retailers in the U.S. The retail channel faces secular challenges driven by changes in consumer behavior and the retail consumer experience as well as the entry into the direct consumer market of competitors financed by low cost capital willing to incur marginal losses to build an account base. Despite these headwinds, retail remains a critical and valuable asset for us for these reasons. We have deep long standing relationships with the majority of the market leading retailers in the U.S. We have direct technology integrations with many of these retailers, enabling the provisioning of differentiated services to the many consumers who use retail locations for financial services. These retailers comprise a major industry vertical looking to offer and embed banking and financial services into their new and existing consumer experiences. They have a large base of consumers using their loyalty and app programs, which generally lack integration with financial services today. We are in a prime position to address this evolution. We are a market leader in the FSC channel with differentiated capabilities and are well positioned to continue to gain market share in FSC over time. Our retail business is tightly linked to our Green Dot Network business, the combination of which is a significant differentiator. Our relationships with these entities provide opportunities to distribute other products and services to them such as PayCard, earned wage access, and other financial products we will launch in the Green Dot Network, for example, over time. We have over a $100 million in capital in our JV with Walmart, Tailfin, intended to invest in and enhance products and services that mutually benefit Green Dot and Walmart. In 2024, our investments in this channel were largely focused on preparing for a significant modernization in technology and user experience, an investment that is long overdue. We are also focused on simplification of the product set to gain efficiencies and launching new KYC tools to enhance compliance and customer experience. As I consider this channel's future, we expect continued pressure from the changes I mentioned, but we have seen negative trends moderate, and we are adding a significant partner in PLS 2024. While the channel may not become a growth engine, declines are flattening and we have meaningful opportunities to stabilize and grow its contribution through cost savings and other optimizations gained from operating at scale across multiple channels. Revenue in our direct-to-consumer channel, aptly named direct, presently constitutes approximately 11% of our overall revenue. Its profit margins are robust, presenting an encouraging foundation for expansion as we navigate a return to growth. In this channel, we engage directly with consumers, furnishing them with modern digital first DDA accounts complemented by an expanding array of features. Our go-to-market strategy is multifaceted, capitalizing on digital advertising and social media as well as traditional channels like TV and direct mail. In recent years, we've strategically repositioned and channeled our resources into nurturing the GO2bank brand and phasing out legacy programs. This strategic shift temporarily impacted revenue growth, a narrative we've transparently communicated. While some legacy brands will continue to phase out gradually, we anticipate surpassing the revenue impact of most significant retirements by mid-2024. As of now, GO2bank constitutes about 70% of this division. And as Jess highlighted, revenue growth was about 30% in 2023. I anticipate our direct channel evolving into a pivotal growth driver in the upcoming years, buoyed by what I perceive as an appealing secular growth opportunity. The ongoing generational shift towards digital first financial platforms align seamlessly with our endeavors. GO2bank characterized by its cost effective and consumer friendly features, embodies a product tailored for the digitally inclined consumers seeking a modern banking experience. The customer profile in this channel is particularly attractive, posting over 20% higher purchase volume per active and almost 30% higher revenue per active compared to the retail channel. Furthermore, a substantially higher percentage of our direct customers use direct deposit, a stable and reliable form of regular deposits versus the retail channel. Our vertically integrated banking and technology platform will enable us to not only drive innovation in this channel, but use that scale to deliver an increasingly robust low cost financial services platform to our market. Beyond its standalone potential, the direct channel serves as a testing ground for innovative products that can later be strategically introduced across our partner channels. I'm optimistic about sustaining the momentum seen in GO2bank, adopting a pragmatic approach to investment and prioritizing high quality profitable growth. With this strategy, I believe we can consistently propel this business forward at a rate that is at least mid-teens over the next several years. Similar to retail, our investment in this channel will focus on a 2024 user experience refresh. In our B2B segment, we have two channels, BaaS and PayCard. Let me first address the BaaS channel, which comprises about 46% of our 2023 revenue. While we had a bit of a headwind in 2023 due to the deconversion of 2 partners, I continue to believe that this business, which is at the heart of embedded finance movement, has tremendous growth potential. In this channel, we work with non-financial companies, traditionally technology driven companies, to deliver financial services products to their end customers. This can take the form of consumer products like traditional DDA accounts, accounts to receive their wages, savings accounts, or small business products like business checking accounts. I would note that one nuance of this division that at times has been a point of confusion is its margin structure, which are generally low. The margins in this division are impacted by a unique relationship with a large fast growing partner that has a profit stream that is not linear with revenue growth, and this results in pressure on our reported margins. However, outside of that relationship, the margin structure here is quite solid and would be one of the higher margins in the company. Turning to the outlook for the future, I believe that we are in the early stages of the growth curve with this business. Consider the following. Every business in America has customers and every one of those customers, be it consumer or business, needs financial services. Companies of all types across the economy are evaluating and considering bringing financial services to their own customers as a way to deepen and monetize their relationships with their customer base. At the same time, consumers and businesses are increasingly receptive to utilizing financial services outside of the traditional delivery channels. Our market reach will continue to expand. I see numerous opportunities as we modernize our technology stack and refine our focus on specific industry verticals where we can build tailored solutions that are easy to deploy at both the high end of the market, but also as we move to the mid-market as well. Our business development organization has been hard at work identifying where those opportunities are, and I am encouraged by the momentum that they are building. Last, as the embedded finance movement evolves, I believe that our position as one of the only truly integrated platforms with our own bank, technology and the Green Dot Network will increasingly resonate in the market. Our investments in this business in 2024 will focus on building enhancing tools our partners and prospects use to engage our business and adding functionality to our product offerings. One last note on our BaaS business. It is clear to us that there is a fee change coming as it relates to regulatory oversight of the Fintech model. Federal Reserve has launched their novel banking program, we believe, specifically designed to extend regulatory oversight to the entire Fintech value chain, not just the bank sitting at the center of account issuance. Since we are vertically integrated, we have long experienced examinations from this perspective, so we welcome and encourage the broadening of regulatory oversight to the end to end Fintech model, often seen as one capitalizing on regulatory arbitrage. We believe these efforts will result in increased oversight operating in the Fintech space, oversight that is overdue. Turning to our PayCard business, where our go-to-market brand is rapid, this channel comprised 6% of total corporate revenue in 2023. In this division, we work directly with employers of all sizes to provide them with a convenient way to pay their employees with a Visa or Mastercard branded card that operates just like a traditional bank issued debit card and DDA account. We also offer earned wage access products to existing pay card and non-pay card clients. This business has grown organically to become, we believe, the third largest in the industry with approximately 15% market share, driven by its industry leading sales force and service organization. On a go forward basis, I believe that this channel should be able to grow at a rate that is at least in the low-double-digit range. And while margins are somewhat depressed at this point, I believe that we will return to a solid payment processing like margin that should scale as revenue growth reaccelerates. There are several things that drive the optimism in my outlook. The core pay card market still has plenty of greenfield opportunity. There are still several million individuals paid by pay per check and between continued adoption of pay card programs and market share gains, there is still ample room for growth. I believe that the market for earned wage access is in the very early stages, and there's a product that I believe could represent a market opportunity of approximately $3 billion. With our industry leading sales force and market share, we are in a strong position to sell this product not only to our existing pay card partners, but also companies that are not PayCard partners, which we have done. Longer term, we believe that employers will increasingly focus on how they can aid their employees in building financial security. With the vertical integration of a strong sales force, integrated technology platform, and our bank charter, our organization is uniquely positioned to be trusted partner to employers to help create and distribute additional relevant financial services to employees. Our 2024 investments in this business are to build in house tools related to customer and client servicing capabilities, mostly along the lines of web portals. These investments set the stage to migrate off of the legacy processor onto our current card management system. Once completed in late 2025, we expect to enjoy savings, which will result in significantly enhanced margins in this business in 2026. Now, let me turn to our Money Movement segment, which is comprised of the Green Dot Network and our tax business, which I'll refer to as TPG. We do not offer permanent DDA accounts through these channels today, which make them a bit different than the rest. The Green Dot Network represents 8% of consolidated revenue with solid margins that have room for scale as its transaction base and revenue return to growth. The cash economy is alive and well in the United States, and millions of consumers need convenient locations to conduct financial transactions if they use our or another's branchless account offerings or they have no DDA account at all. We provide a network of over 90,000 locations and high quality retailers where individuals and potentially small businesses can load and withdraw cash to DDAs, prepaid cards, and digital wallets. We support bill payments made in cash and serve as a convenient cash loading location for financial institutions during hours when banks are closed. This is a unique business that has limited market participants with a very wide moat that is supported by direct integrations to many of the leading retailers. While the division in general has been impacted by the headwinds in our proprietary retail channel, I'd like for it to return to growth in 2024 and see numerous opportunities for growth in the future. Though the world is growing digital, our network provides an omnichannel delivery platform for digital financial services. The Green Dot Network bridges the divide between finance and the reality that any consumer still has the need to deposit and withdraw cash. The growing number of digital account platforms with a variety of business models are realizing they need to provide an omnichannel experience and they value the convenience of our network. As a result, we have seen third-party transactions grow and now comprise almost two-thirds of the total transaction base and growing. At the same time, we are more closely integrating the network with our BaaS business and establishing this as a competitive differentiator that is helping us win BaaS customers and will drive transaction growth. Our investments in 2024 in this channel will focus first on maximizing the demand opportunities by ensuring we can materially shorten the client onboarding process, and we are building automation tools to solve that problem and to expand the product offering, building out our capabilities in areas like bill payment, disbursements and small business products and services. This channel has declined in 2023 as a result of declines faced in the rest of our business, but as I noted, the third-party business is growing nicely. Long-term growth rate in this channel has tremendous opportunity, but given the near term headwinds, our current expectations are conservative with long-term rates in the high-single-digits if we execute well. Last but not least, I would like to talk about our tax business, the Tax Processing Group or TPG, which comprised approximately 6% of our consolidated revenue. TPG is the market-leading player in its space with substantial market share bringing a scale that leads to attractive margins. TPG aids tax repairs in filing over 15 million tax returns and facilitating the payment of the preparation fee to the preparer with the revenue model essentially being a per transaction fee. With its market leading position, this division has steady predictable results that generate attractive free cash flow. TPG is a well-managed business and is benefiting from investments we have made in modernizing its technology delivery platform, TPG Next. Implemented two years ago, we believe TPG Next sets the standard in the industry, allows for additional product and partner integration strategies, and has led to additional market share capture. TPG is a low to middle-single-digit grower based on its current offerings. However, there are a number of opportunities to drive growth higher in this business. TPG works with 27,000 tax preparers, an exciting customer base of small and micro businesses. We are developing business banking services that are more tailored to their unique needs given our in-depth knowledge of their business. In the past, we opened and closed millions of temporary bank accounts for the taxpayers so that we may provide our services to them. We are now testing the issuance of permanent GO2bank like accounts to these taxpayers and ensuring that we market appropriately to the taxpayers so that they understand the value of using the account on a permanent basis, a significant acquisition channel in waiting. We have any number of opportunities to develop new products either that we offer directly, like state income tax refund transfers, SMB credit or products we partner with third parties to distribute on their behalf. Our 2024 investments in TPG will be to make some final enhancements to TPG next and to set the stage for future product offerings in 2025 and beyond. How does this all fit together? I believe it is obvious that Green Dot manages a portfolio of assets each individually have significant standalone value. Together, they have the potential to create much more value as we weave our shared services platform into a uniform vertically integrated offering that is unmatched in the market. Sitting below our retail, direct, BaaS, and PayCard offerings are a set of platforms that are or will be provisioning services to these channels at a scale these channels could not obtain on an independent basis. These platforms include processing and issuing, product development and management, operations, including network disputes and customer care. Complementing these platforms is the Green Dot Network, which is a critical differentiated enabler for all of our channels distributing DDA products. And all of these businesses sit one I have not mentioned, Green Dot Bank. Our bank issues accounts for all of our distribution channels, holds and earns income on billion in deposits and itself has a number as of yet to be developed opportunities we will leverage in the future. I am often asked if I think only the bank is necessary for our business model. Why don't we rent a bank like so many of our competitors and forego regulatory scrutiny? My answer to that is that, as I mentioned at the outset, the DDA sits at the center of all we do. Owning a bank is hard, and expectations of performance and consumer care are high for companies that own banks. We need to care for our customers at those standards regardless of whether we own a bank or not. Not owning a bank would not change that. As I mentioned earlier, we look forward to the various state and federal regulators normalizing and equalizing regulatory oversight of the activities involved in issuing and managing DDA accounts regardless of whether it's done in a bank owned or a bank sponsored model. When I look at the portfolio of businesses that we own and how fit into our strategy, I view it through two lenses, financial and strategic. From a financial perspective, we have a company that has a portfolio of businesses with diverse growth and profit characteristics that I believe complement each other and can drive value. Business like retail and TPG are substantially generated capital that we allocate to those businesses or we see strong in growth profiles. Having strong sources of capital generation which leading market share is a differentiator and an advantage. Many of our competitors generate cash losses seemingly as a business model and rely upon external capital to fund their growth. At the same time, several of our businesses have attractive secular growth profiles like BaaS, Direct and PayCard, while Green Dot Network has a more modest growth profile but is a key part of the equation in growing our BaaS business and supporting the retail channel. They all operate in growth markets and I believe we have a unique competitive advantage that I discussed in my previous comments. All of these businesses, which represent 70% of our revenue, are profitable and have attractive investment opportunities in front of them. While I'm on the topic of our financial profile, I believe it is important to point out that our free cash flow generation, while solid, should improve sharply beyond 2024 as we have now made the final $35 million investment into Tailfin Venture, bringing to conclusion the sequence of payments agreed to by prior management. Finally, this collection of businesses provides us with a unique position to be a leader in the embedded finance. The market for embedded finance is built on the premise of non-financial companies delivering financial services. When I think about what we do for our partners and our customers, it's quite simple in certain respects. Our partners in our direct channel deliver DDA accounts, payment cards, and facilitate financial transactions, all of which are powered by our vertically integrated platform. Now let me briefly discuss my corporate priorities for 2024. Our first priority is now and will always be ensuring we have in place all the capabilities, technical, organizationally, and operationally to ensure we have state of the art regulatory compliance systems and capabilities. Where the company has fallen short in the past, we have and will correct it, and we have every intention of being a model in the future for others to follow. Second, we're getting more serious about the business of accelerating revenue growth and continuing to build momentum in our development efforts. While the first half of 2024 faces some tough comparisons, as we move through 2024, we should see revenue growth reaccelerate. As you have noted, I have commented on various investments in 2024. We will be making a number of investments in our product and servicing capabilities to bring us to par where we are not into lead markets where we can. Third is execution. This is a priority in '23, and we have gotten better at execution, but I still see room for improvement in how we go about executing our initiatives, both in terms of timelines and improving outcomes associated with those efforts. As we improve here, we should expect further efficiency and margin improvements, which will enable us to continue to reinvest while driving earnings growth. Finally, we will continue to invest in people. We must operate a high performance culture with high focus on developing management capabilities. With that, I'd like to welcome two new members of the management team, our new Chief Human Resources Officer, Michael Meston and our new Chief Product Officer, Melissa Douros. Michael has a long career with large multinational technology companies, and Melissa brings a wealth of payment, bank, and technology experiences from Discover. Both Michael and Melissa are talented seasoned executives, and I'm excited to welcome them to the team and look forward to the positive impact that they will bring to Green Dot. In closing, we had a productive 2023 and made numerous strides in positioning Green Dot to be the leader in embedded finance. I would like to thank the team for all their hard work and efforts in 2023. There is still plenty of work to be done, but the team is energized our outlook for 2024 points to accelerating fundamentals. I look forward to updating you on our progress in future calls. And with that, Jess and I will be happy to take your questions. Operator?