Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Genco's first quarter 2025 conference call. I will begin today's call by reviewing our Q1 2025 and year-to-date highlights. Additionally, we will provide an update on our value strategy, highlight our new share repurchase program and discuss our financial results for the quarter, as well as the industry's current fundamentals before opening the call up for questions. For additional information, please also refer to our earnings presentation posted on our website. Beginning on Slide 5. Despite the seasonally softer first quarter and consistent with our success providing dividends to shareholders through market cycles, we continued to prioritize our quarterly dividend policy. Specifically, we declared a $0.15 per share dividend, extending our track record of providing 23 quarters of consecutive dividends and marking the longest stretch of uninterrupted dividends in our dry bulk peer group. Over this period, Genco has declared $6.765 per share of dividends, representing 50% of our current share price. Notably, for the first quarter of 2025, our dividend formula, including a voluntary reserve of $19.5 million, would not have produced a dividend. However, management and the Board chose to reduce the reserve from $19.5 million to $1.1 million for the quarter, resulting in the $0.15 per share dividend. This highlights our commitment to our dividend and returns to shareholders, as well as our favorable view of the long-term fundamentals of the dry bulk industry and the improving freight environment in Q2 so far. We have paid sizable dividends to shareholders in different freight environments over the past six years, as highlighted on Page 6, and we are pleased to build upon this strong track record by putting in place a $50 million share repurchase program. We believe that significant equity market volatility has resulted in a disconnect between our share valuation and the underlying fundamentals of our business. We have long held the view that when this extreme dynamic materializes, it is the appropriate time to put in place a share repurchase program. This is a capital allocation tool that we have extensively evaluated throughout the cycle and view this as a compelling and opportunistic way to capture shareholder value if we continue to experience downward volatility. Importantly, the share repurchase program is incremental to our quarterly dividend policy, which we intend to maintain as our primary method of returning cash to shareholders. Turning to Slide 7, with an industry low net loan-to-value ratio of 6%, a low cash flow breakeven rate, and over $320 million in undrawn revolver availability, we believe Genco remains in a highly advantageous position to successfully operate in the current volatile geopolitical environment and continue to differentiate ourselves from our dry bulk peer group. Going forward, we remain focused on executing on the three pillars of our value strategy, dividends, deleveraging, and capitalizing on accretive growth and fleet renewal opportunities. We also intend to act opportunistically in carrying out our new share repurchase program to create long-term shareholder value. From a dry bulk market perspective, in January and February, the freight rate environment experienced typical seasonal factors as weather conditions and key export regions reduce seaborne volumes, temporarily misaligning the supply and demand balance resulting in pressure on freight rates. However, in March, freight rates rallied as some of these temporary factors dissipated. We saw cap rates rise from under $6,000 a day to nearly $24,000 a day in a matter of weeks, highlighting the significant operating leverage inherent in the business. As we look forward with added long-haul tons hitting the market towards the end of 2025 and into 2026 together with a historically low Capesize order book, the potential catalysts are clear. We currently are in an operating environment characterized by compelling dry bulk supply and demand fundamentals, but also an ever-changing geopolitical landscape. During times like these, we focus on what we can control, which is our capital structure and our asset base. Maintaining low financial leverage and in turn a low cash flow breakeven, enables Genco to not only continue to pay dividends in periods of downward volatility, but also to take advantage of accretive growth opportunities with a wide variety of capital allocation tools at our disposal. We believe this capital allocation strategy works well in all operating environments, will enable Genco to be nimble as markets develop and offer a compelling risk reward balance for our investors. I will now turn the call over to Peter Allen, our Chief Financial Officer.