Thank you, Jay, and good morning, everyone. With our incredibly successful third quarter in the books, we remain very confident that 2024 will be a strong and record-setting year. Today, we raised our MPC EBT, operating asset NOI and condo sales guidance expectations and we tightened our cash G&A expectations for the year. In MPCs, with the record EBT results in the third quarter, we now expect to deliver enhance results for the full year. In the fourth quarter, we anticipate continued momentum in Texas with incremental landfills in Bridgeland and the Woodlands sales. In Summerlin, following the very successful sale of 217 acres of superpads year-to-date, we do not anticipate additional closings in the fourth quarter, but we do see very strong prospects for additional sales in 2025. Overall, for 2024, we now expect MPC EBT will be down 1% to 6%, which will imply a midpoint of $330 million and represents an improvement over the original guidance of $30 million at the midpoint. This guidance contemplates record residential line sales revenue, including record acre sold at a record average price per acre, which largely offset reduced commercial landfills and builder price participation, as well as limited inventory of custom lot sales due to a significant past success in the area of Woodlands and Summit in Summerlin. In operating assets with the strong performance of our portfolio year-to-date, we now expect record full year NOI of approximately $257 million at the midpoint, with growth in all property types. Our guidance contemplates some seasonality and modest cost increases in the fourth quarter, but overall represents a solid 5% to 8% year-over-year increase. This comes favorably to our previous guidance range of up 3% to 6%, including $3 million of NOI in the Las Vegas Ballpark in the prior year and represents an increase of $2 million at the midpoint. Condo sales revenues, which was previously expected to range between $730 million and $350 million are now expected to range between $755 million and $765 million. Gross margin expectations are now expected to be between 27% and 28%. This guidance is driven by the completion of Victoria Place, with more residences closing in the fourth quarter than we originally expected and only $10 million to $20 million of condo sales revenues delaying into the first quarter of 2025. And finally, we now expect cash G&A to range between $83 million and $88 million for the full year, which compares to our prior guidance of $80 million to $90 million. This guidance excludes $33 million of expenses incurred to complete the spinoff of Seaport Entertainment, which are now reflected in discontinued operations, as well proximately $9 million of noncash stock compensation. During the quarter, we recognized $90 million of other income related to the final settlement of our dispute at Waiea in Ward Village. Over the last few years, we expensed $158 million to remediate construction defect including the replacement of all the windows in the tower, while pursuing reimbursement from general contractors, other responsible parties and wireless insurance carriers. This $90 million payment represents a full payout of the related insurance policy and the release of any further claims. In conjunction with the settlement, we also reached to pay general contractor $22 million, which settled final project costs that they incurred during way construction. Approximately $10 million of this was previously accrued. Therefore, we recognized $12 million of incremental condominium rights and unit cost of sales during the quarter. With these disputes now settled, the overall gross margin achieved was approximately 25%. Turning to our balance sheet. We had $401 million of cash at the end of the quarter, leaving us well-positioned to deploy capital as necessary in the future. At the end of September, the remaining equity contribution needed to fund our current projects was approximately $242 million. From a debt perspective, we had $5.3 billion outstanding at the end of the third quarter with $308 million of maturities during 2024. Approximately $304 million of these near-term maturities are related to the construction loan on Victoria Place, which will be paid as units closed this quarter, leaving us to approximately $30 million of principal amortization payments during the remainder of 2024. For 2025, we have approximately $461 million maturity, which includes the office construction loans for 6100 Merriweather and 1700 Pavilion, both of which are more than 90% leased. It also includes our multifamily construction loans for Marlow, Tanager Echo, and Wingspan. Refinancing discussions for many of these assets are already underway, and we will have more to share with you in the coming quarters. And finally, during the third quarter, we closed on the sale of $193 million of existing lot receivables through the issuance of third-party tax-exempt bonds from which we reached cash proceeds of $152 million after transaction costs. The third-party warrants will be fully serviced by reimbursement cash flows. As part of this transaction, we also sold $33 million of future MUD receivables for additional cash proceeds of $24 million. If the MUD reimbursement cash flows are consistent with our expectations, the future MUD receivables could either be returned to Bridgeland or sold in a future transaction. However, if a delay or other event cuts us a shortfall to bondholders, the cash flows from the future MUD receivables would then be used to serve as the bonds. However, there are no obligations for Howard Hughes to service the bonds or provide any additional collateral. Although this transaction generated a GAAP loss on sale of $52 after considering relevant accounting adjustments, it significantly accelerated the time to recapture this cash, while creating a new liquidity mechanism which further enhances our self-funding model with $33 million of the loss being excess security available to score future MUD sales. We used the cash proceeds from this transaction to significantly pay down Bridgeland debt by $192 million in the quarter. Subsequent to quarter end, we also successfully expanded this line of credit borrowing capacity from $475 million to $600 million and extended its maturity by three years to 2029, providing additional optionality to fund MPC development in the coming years. I would now like to turn the call back over to David for closing remarks.