Thank you, H. And good morning to everyone joining us on the call. As reported in our release earlier today, our third quarter results were negatively affected by the narrowing of spreads between selling prices and raw material costs relative to the prior year quarter. The reduction in spread has more than offset the favorable impact of higher shipments in the current year. As a result, Insteel's net earnings for the third quarter of fiscal 2024 fell to $6.6 million or $0.34 per share from $10.6 million or $0.54 per share a year ago. Net sales for the quarter declined 12% to $145.8 million, driven by a 16.3% decrease in average selling prices, partially offset by a 5.1% increase in shipments. On a sequential basis, average selling prices fell by 5.3% while shipments rose 20.8%. Competitive pricing pressures within our welded wire reinforcing markets and the growing impact of low price PC strand imports continue to pressure selling prices. Furthermore, steel scrap prices trended down during the quarter, which has created additional headwinds for AFPs. Despite the decline in selling prices, our shipments benefited this quarter from a strengthening demand environment for our products and increased activity across our construction end markets. Throughout each month of the quarter, our year-over-year shipments were higher than the prior year. However, we did experience several challenges as unfavorable weather conditions and the growing influence of low price imports in certain of our PC strand markets negatively impacted shipments. Furthermore, we actively worked throughout the quarter to ramp up operating schedules at certain of our facilities to fully meet an improving order book and reduce delivery lead times. Gross profit decreased to $15.4 million from $20.4 million in the prior year quarter and gross margin narrowed to 10.6% from 12.3%, primarily due to lower spreads between selling prices and raw material costs, which offset the benefit of higher shipments. After rebounding in the second quarter following a January price increase, spreads again came under pressure in the current period, with the year-over-year decline in ASPs outpacing the reduction in our inventory carrying values. As we move into the fourth quarter, we anticipate spreads to remain near current levels as selling prices continue to face downward pressure. Unit conversion costs for the third quarter improved both year-over-year and sequentially from the second quarter but remain elevated due to lower operating levels. As we enter our fourth quarter, we expect to make further progress in reducing our conversion costs as we continue ramping up operating schedules in response to improving market conditions and leveraging our recent capital investments. SG&A expense for the quarter remained unchanged at $7.9 million, representing a 5.4% of net sales compared to 4.8% of net sales in the previous year. An increase in depreciation expense combined with the relative year-over-year change in the cash rented value of life insurance policies were offset by lower compensation expense under our return on capital based incentive plan, which was negatively impacted by weaker year-to-date results. Our effective tax rate for the quarter rose to 24.7% from 22% a year ago. The increase was largely driven by the effect of a discrete tax item, which had an amplified impact on the rate due to the lower pretax earnings. Looking ahead to the balance of the year, we expect our effective rate to run close to 23% subject to the level of pretax earnings, book tax differences, and the other assumptions and estimates that compose our tax provision calculation. Moving to the cash flow statement of the balance sheet. Cash flow from operations for the quarter generated $18.7 million of cash due mainly to net earnings and reduction in net working capital. This reduction was driven mostly by $10.4 million increase in accounts payable and accrued expenses as well as a $3.2 million decrease in inventories. Our inventory position at the end of the quarter represented 2.5 months of shipments on a forward-looking basis, calculated off of forecasted Q4 shipments, which is down slightly from 2.6 months at the end of the second quarter. In addition, the average unit cost of our inventories at the end of the third quarter was lower than our third quarter cost of sales. This is expected to have a favorable impact on spreads and margins in the fourth quarter as the lower cost materials consumed are reflected in cost of sales provided the average selling prices did not decrease to a greater extent. We incurred $3.2 million in capital expenditures in the quarter for a total of $17.5 million through the first nine months of our fiscal year. Based on our forecasted expenditures for the fourth quarter, we have reduced our full year target at $25 million from the previous communicated target to $30 million. H will provide more detail on this topic in his remarks. We continued our share buyback during the quarter, repurchasing $1 million of our common equity equal to approximately 30,000 shares. From a liquidity perspective, we ended the quarter with $97.7 million of cash on hand and were debt free with no borrowings outstanding on our $100 million revolving credit facility, providing us ample financial flexibility and ability to pursue any attractive growth opportunities that may develop. Turning to the macro indicators for our construction end markets. The latest reports for the Architectural Billings and Dodge Momentum Indexes, which are leading indicators for non-residential building construction, offer a mixed view of market conditions going forward. In May, the ABI declined to a score of 42.4, remaining well below the growth threshold of 50 as architectural firms report both a decrease in billings and a slowdown in new projects. On the other hand, the Dodge Momentum Index, which tracks non-residential building projects entering the planning phase, rose by 10.4% in June to 198.6. This represents a 7% increase year-over-year. The higher June reading was largely due to a 14.5% rise in the commercial component of the index, fueled by data center planning activity. Year-over-year, the commercial segment is up 25%. The latest May report from the US Department of Commerce shows that the monthly construction spending data remains strong. Total spending on a seasonally adjusted annual basis is up 6.4% from last year. Non-residential construction is up over 6.2% and public highway and street construction, which is one of the largest end use applications for our products, is up 9%. However, while construction spending remains elevated, US cement shipments, another measure that we track, continues to lag 2023 levels as shipments were down 8.1% in March and 4.4% for the calendar year. Finally, this week, the AIA released its semi-annual construction forecast for non-residential building construction for 2024 and 2025. Spending on non-residential buildings is projected to increase 7% for 2024, driven by strong gains in the industrial sector. However, the forecast also indicates that spending growth is expected to slow in 2025 with only 2% growth in overall spending projected. This concludes my prepared remarks. I'll now turn the call back over to H.