Thanks, John. Today, I will review our fiscal third quarter 2023 operating results, provide guidance for the fourth quarter, update remaining full fiscal year 2023 guidance as appropriate and comment on our financial position. Let me start with highlights for the recently completed third fiscal quarter ended June 30, 2023. The company generated quarterly revenues of $724 million versus $769 million from the previous quarter. As expected, the quarterly decrease in revenue was due primarily to sequentially lower average rig count. Total direct operating costs were $430 million for the third quarter versus $450 million for the previous quarter. The sequential decrease is also attributable to the lower average rig count in North America solutions. General and administrative expenses were approximately $49 million for the third quarter. For the full year, we still expect approximately $205 million with the implied sequential increase driven by the timing of professional services and software fees. During the third quarter, we recognized a loss of approximately $19 million, primarily related to the change in the fair market value of our equity investments which is reported as a part of loss on investment securities in our consolidated statement of operations. Our Q3 effective tax rate was approximately 30%, which was slightly above our previously guided range for the quarter due to certain discrete tax adjustments and incremental foreign taxes. We still expect the full year effective tax rate to range between 23% and 28%. To summarize, this quarter's consolidated results, H&P earned a profit of $0.93 per diluted share versus $1.55 in the previous quarter. As highlighted in our press release, the third quarter earnings per share were negatively impacted by a net $0.16 loss per share of select items consisting primarily of the aforementioned loss on investment securities. Absent these select items, adjusted diluted earnings per share were $1.09 in the third fiscal quarter versus an adjusted $1.26 during the second fiscal quarter. Capital expenditures for the third quarter of fiscal 2023 were $100 million, which was $15 million more than the previous quarter spend. I will comment later on our revised fiscal 2023 capital expenditure guidance. H&P generated approximately $293 million in operating cash flow during the third quarter of 2023. I will address the company's cash position later in my remarks. Turning to our other three segments, beginning with the North America Solutions segment. We averaged 166 contracted rigs during the third quarter, down from an average of 183 rigs in fiscal Q2, the exit rig count of 153 was slightly less than our guided range of between 155 and 160 as rigs were released for multiple reasons, including customers exceeding their production targets, customer budget exhaustion and weak natural gas price levels. This softening in activity caused revenues to decrease sequentially by $34 million. Segment direct margin was $277 million, which was within our April guidance, but sequentially lower than the previous quarter, which came in at $296 million. Performance contracts are made up of approximately 50% of total contracted rigs in the third quarter. Total segment expenses increased to $18,700 per day in the third quarter from $18,300 per day in the second quarter. Included in the third quarter figure was a select item of approximately $270 per day related to a contingent earn-out liability adjustment for a previous acquisition. Looking ahead to the fourth quarter of fiscal 2023 for North America Solutions. Today, we have 149 rigs contracted, 147, of which are super-spec rigs, and we project some continued softening during the current quarter, which will leave between 141 and 147 contracted rigs at the end of the fourth fiscal quarter. As we moved through Q3, oil price volatility and forward macro uncertainty were a topic of concern for customers. As we ended Q3 and headed into Q4, we had additional rig releases related to more customer budget exhaustion, customers are not wanting to outgrow their production levels and some recent customer M&A activity. This led to more releases than we had line of sight to just a couple of months ago. This corresponding decrease in number of units working will result in lower North America solution revenue levels for Q4 than we previously expected. That said, I would reiterate what John mentioned regarding customer discussions about rig additions in calendar Q4 and how those lead us to believe that we may be reaching a bottom for US rig activity. Our current revenue backlog from our North America Solutions fleet is roughly $900 million for rigs under term contract. As of today, approximately 62% of the US active fleet is on a term contract. Average pricing per day should remain relatively flat to slightly down, as high rate spot rig releases are offset to some extent by legacy term rate rollovers. If we see the aforementioned pickup in activity in calendar Q4, we would expect our average pricing levels to continue. In the North America segment, we expect direct margins in fiscal Q4 to range between $230 million to $250 million due to the sequential decline in activity levels. We currently expect fourth quarter per day cost to remain flat at approximately $18,700 per day. This per day cost is elevated from our expectations a couple of quarters ago, due to the idling of rigs in the third and fourth quarters, which results in the -- which results in our overhead absorption being spread over a smaller number of active rigs. As John mentioned, when we look beyond fiscal Q4 to calendar year-end, we believe more rigs will be put back to work, which should reverse some of the near-term impact overhead absorption has on daily costs moving forward in fiscal 2024. Next to our International Solutions segment. International Solutions activity ended the third fiscal quarter with 13 rigs drilling on contract. International Solutions results were slightly below previous guidance, due to higher-than-expected costs. As we look toward the fourth quarter of fiscal 2023 for international, as John mentioned, we anticipate beginning drilling operations in mid-fourth quarter with the rig that was mobilized to Australia in the third quarter. Expenses associated with advancing our Middle East hub are expected to continue but at a much lower rate as we wrap up many of our planned preparations, as John mentioned, we are hopeful that those efforts to date will result in an award from a recent tender process. In the fourth quarter, we expect to earn $8 million to $11 million in direct margin aside from any foreign exchange impacts. Finally, to our Offshore Gulf of Mexico segment. We had four of our seven offshore platform rigs contracted, one of which was on a demobilization rate that the customer has reached the end of its multiyear drilling program. We have active management contracts on three customer-owned rigs, one of which is on active rate. The offshore segment generated a direct margin of $7.3 million during the quarter, which was in-line with our estimate. As we look toward the fourth quarter of fiscal 2023 for the offshore Gulf of Mexico segment, one of our platform rigs should complete its demobilization this next week, and we expect offshore will generate between $6 million to $8 million of direct margin in Q4. Let me update full fiscal year 2023 guidance as appropriate. Capital expenditures for the full fiscal 2023 year are now expected to be approximately $400 million which is a $25 million decrease from our prior guidance range of midpoint. Although we expect the timing of our CapEx spend to vary from quarter-to-quarter, supply chain delays have continued to push some planned maintenance CapEx from fiscal 2023 to fiscal 2024. In particular, some of our planned component overhauls have been delayed due to lags in obtaining certain parts. As previously mentioned, our expectations for general and administrative expenses for the full fiscal 2023 year remained $205 million. We are still estimating our annual effective tax rate to be in the range of 23% to 28% with the variance above US statutory rate of 21% attributed to permanent book-to-tax differences and state and foreign income taxes. Through Q3, we have paid cash tax of approximately $156 million, and we're projecting to pay $25 million to $50 million for the remainder of the fiscal year, resulting in an annual cash tax range of $180 million to $205 million. Now looking at our financial position. H&P hedged cash and short-term investments of approximately $293 million at June 30 versus an equivalent $245 million in March 31. The sequentially increased cash balance is largely attributable to working capital unlock. Including availability under our revolving credit facility, our liquidity remains relatively flat at just over $1 billion, approximately 3.2 million shares were repurchased in fiscal Q3 for about $103 million. Fiscal 2023 repurchases have totaled 6.5 million shares thus far or about $249 million. The repurchases today are at an average price of about $38 per share and have reduced shares outstanding from the beginning of fiscal 2023 by approximately 6%, there are 1.3 million shares remaining under the calendar 2023 authorization of 7 million shares. As John indicated earlier, this fiscal year-to-date, including share repurchases and dividends paid and declared, the company has returned approximately $451 million of capital to shareholders as follows: $104 million in base dividends, $98 million in supplemental dividends and $249 million in share repurchases. Each of these items, the repurchases of the base and supplemental dividends encompass the capital allocation and shareholder return model that we announced in October at the beginning of fiscal 2023. Looking ahead to fiscal 2024, we will refresh that model in our annual budgeting process, taking into consideration various factors, including expected activity levels, planned capital expenditure levels and anticipated cash flow margin. We will discuss this plan on our November call. Finally, a follow-up on John's comments about returns just above cost of capital. On our November 2022 call, we discussed our plan and our need to focus on achieving positive returns as measured in ROIC. In this current fiscal year, we have achieved that necessary step for our shareholders for the first time since 2014. H&P's return focus, combined with our capital allocation execution underscores our strategy to not only enhance the financial returns of the company but also increase the cash returns provided to shareholders. That concludes our prepared remarks for the third fiscal quarter. Let me now turn the call over to Ashley for questions.