Thank you very much, James. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining International Seaways earnings call for the third quarter of 2024. Starting on Slide 4 and noting our presentation can be found under Investor Relations on our website. Net income for the third quarter was $92 million or $1.84 per diluted share. Excluding the gains on vessel sales and other one-off items, adjusted net income for the third quarter was $78 million or $1.57 per share. Our EBITDA was over $143 million with adjusted EBITDA at $130 million. Referencing our balance sheet on the upper right hand chart, we have nearly $700 million in total liquidity, which includes over $540 million of undrawn revolver capacity. With our gross debt is $660 million and our net debt at $500 million, our net loan to vessel value is historically low at under 14%. With no maturity until the next decade and 34 unencumbered vessels, the cash breakeven on our spot fleet is under $13,500 per day. We've referenced our fleet optimization on the lower left section of the slide, as we sold another vessel for $24 million in net proceeds. Overall, during 2024, we sold three 15 year old MRs for a total of $72 million and acquired six MRs under 10 years old for $232 million partially funded by 624,000 shares issued in the second quarter. On the lower right, using proceeds from our last vessel sale, we purchased and retired over 500,000 shares at an average price of under $50 per share. In the same quarter, we paid a combined dividend of $1.50 per share. This combined $100 million in returns to shareholders over the third quarter represented 84% of our adjusted net income from the prior quarter. Today, we announced a combined dividend of a $1.20 per share equating to over 75% of our third quarter adjusted net income. Over the last 12 months, Seaways has returned over 12% of our average market cap. We continue to believe in our balanced capital allocation approach, positioning the company for the future with opportunistic fleet renewal and enhancing our balance sheet while sharing in our up cycle with a double-digit dividend yield to our shareholders. On Slide 5, we've updated our set of bullets on tanker demand drivers with a subtle green up arrow next to the bullet represented as positive for tankers. The black dashes representing a neutral impact and a red down arrow, meaning the driver is not positive for tanker demand. Pulling some highlights. Oil demand growth over the next two years is still at or above the growth rate over the last 30 years. While China has lost some steam in its oil demand growth, we're monitoring the impacts of their announced stimulus, which has yet to be factored into oil demand forecast for 2025 and beyond. During the third quarter, we saw weaker production from OPEC Plus largely due to Libyan disruption. OPEC Plus has now decided to hold off increasing output from December until January of 2025. The outcomes of elections worldwide may impact tanker demand. And it remains uncertain how shifting world politics will ultimately impact us. Finally, at the bottom of the page, the chart shows OECD inventories with a slight build in the third quarter. U.S. inventories, which are readily available each week has shown draws over the last few months. Inventory draws negatively impact tanker demand in the short term. But over time, this slips to a positive factor for tankers as demand calls for barrels on the water. On Slide 6, the order book of tankers did creep up during 2024. Still, as you can see in the lower left hand chart, ships on order are still quite low relative to the size of the fleet in historical context. Not factored in on this chart, but reflected on the lower right hand side of the page, new orders that deliver over the next four years barely replaced the fleet that is turning 25 years old. The natural end of a ship life. There are another 1,500 plus vessels that are turning 20 years old above the delivery schedule that need replacement. This is significant for the tanker industry as a limited tanker supply continues to be supportive of strong tanker earnings. We believe this translates into a continued strength over the next few years with Seaways well positioned to continue capitalizing on the market conditions. You can count on us to utilize our balanced capital allocation approach, renewing our fleet, adapting to industry conditions, and keeping a strong balance sheet while returning to shareholders. I'm now going to turn it over to our CFO, Jeff Pribor to provide the financial review.