Thank you very much, James. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining International Seaways earnings call for the fourth quarter, and for the full year of 2023. You can find our presentation on the Investor Relations section of our website. 2023 was a record year for International Seaway. Our net income was $556 million, $11.25 per share, if eclipsed 2022s net income of $388 million, $7.77 per share. Net income for the fourth quarter of 2023 was $132 million, $2.68 per share. Included in these figures are gains on vessel sales, and a write-off of deferred financing costs. Excluding these special items, adjusted net income was $525 million for the year and $108 million for the quarter. Seaways close 2023 with just over $600 million in total liquidity, $187 million in cash and $414 million in undrawn revolver. Jeff will highlight our balance sheet in just a few moments, but feeling a little bit of his thunder, our $547 million in net debt is well below our fleet recycle market value. In 2023, we repaid $475 million in debt, of which $300 million was incremental to our natural debt amortization schedule. With this sizable prepayment during the year, we reduced our breakeven level to an impressive sub $14,500 per day level across the fleet. We unencumbered 30 vessels and we doubled the size of our revolving credit capacity to $414 million. Today we announced that we signed an MOA to purchase six Eco MR vessels to $232 million. We expect to fund this through shares of common stock for 15% of the price and the remainder will be financed from our available liquidity. We anticipate closing this series of transactions prior to the end of the second quarter. These MRs are high quality vessels that reduce the age of our overall MR fleet by one year. During 2023, we sold three MRs for $39 million in net proceeds after debt repayment. The sales of the older ship crystallized value generated since our merger with Diamond S in 2021 at the bottom of the tanker market. These ships returned nearly 80% all in, from purchase price due to both their strong earnings and the strong price realized in their sale. Finally, we added two vessels to our charter our portfolio, which now has over $354 million in contracted revenue, with an average term of nearly three years. On the lower right hand of the slide, you can see the chart, where we continue to share our strong earnings, returning a substantial portion to shareholders. During 2023, we paid $308 million dividends was $14 million of repurchases. Combined, we returned over $320 million to shareholders, a 16% return on our average market cap over the year. Today, we build upon the Seaways record, declaring a combined dividend of $1.32 per share to be paid at the end of this quarter. This is 60% of adjusted net income. At Seaways, we're committed to our balanced capital allocation strategy. We pull all the levers to secure our future and to provide value to shareholders in 2023. We continue to hydrate the fleet, investing in our profitable LR1 joint venture, we're renewing the MR fleet. And we have time charted out selected vessels with strong customers to secure revenues beyond today. Our balance sheet is strong, with net loan to value of 17%. We have liquidity over $600 million and breakeven so though you would expect them for a company with only smaller vessels, not for a tanker company where half the fleet is large crude. We continue to share success with the shareholders, with double digit yield on our share value. Turning to Slide five. We've updated our bullets on tanker demand drivers, with green up arrows next to bullets representing positive developments for tankers, black dashes for neutral impact, and red down arrows indicating tanker negative. Pulling some highlights. The forecast for oil demand in 2024 remains robust, with demand growth estimated to be about 1.5 million barrels per day in 2024, representing a 1.5% growth year-over-year. This is an above average demand growth forecasts, particularly for seaborne transportation demand, oil demand growth is largely concentrated in Asia, where countries are structurally short oil with incremental new supply coming from the west. Quite a long haul trade for tankers. Non-OPEC production growth of around a million barrels per day is mostly coming from the Americas in 2024, a supported tanker trends. In the chart at the bottom of the page we highlight oil supply and oil demand projected trends for the next few years. Europe and Asia structurally short and therefore focused on imports from the Americas, the Middle East and Russia. With sanctions on Russian oil, further ton mile support underlies demand and is very supportive for the tanker market going forward. Much of this hinges upon the global macro environment with recent data suggesting and leaning towards a softer landing. It is constructive that commercial inventories are low any trade disruptions within the market increases the call for seaborne transportation. So I fix, the supply side continues to be a compelling part of the strong tanker market story. On the lower left hand chart, we break down the order book. By each vessel class relative to the top reading speed and more specifically potential candidates in the next few years that would be at the very least removed from broad commercial trading at around 20 years of age. Since the order book is largely fixed through 2026, we are showing vessels that will be 20 years old. By this inflection point, they are 18 years old today. In lining the dark bars on the graph, you can see that the vessels on order do not even meet the need to replace the existing fleet on the water. On the lower right hand chart, we show expected deliveries in the near term. In most categories, they are largely lower than they have been over the last 30 years. The number of ships reaching over 20 years of age as the percentage of the total fleet continues to rise exponentially. Essentially, when the cycle turns the fleet size will rationalize laying the foundation for the future health of the tanker industry. We do not expect a meteoric rise in new orders either, as tanker owners face pending environmental regulations. Shipyards are full of other shipping sectors, and prices remain very robust. We expect a great run for tankers over the next few years. As mentioned, regional imbalances of oil should continue to increase the need for tankers, as growth in oil production is coming from the west. And the oil demand is driven by non-OECD in the East. At Seaways, we will continue capturing the strength of the tanker markets. We will utilize every possible lever, to build upon our track record of returning to shareholders, maintaining a healthy balance sheet and growing the value of Seaway. I'll now turn it over to Jeff Pribor our CFO to provide the financial review. Jeff?