Thanks, John, and good morning to everyone listening to the call. And I'll begin on slide four, which provides an overview of the interest rate and agency mortgage markets year-to-date. As John mentioned, and as shown in the chart in the upper-left, yields on longer maturity U.S. treasuries rose sharply in the third quarter in a bear-flattening move. Short-term rates rose modestly as the slowdown in inflation data signaled an impending pause in monetary policy tightening, while yields on treasuries maturing between five and 30 years increased between 45 and 85 basis points, as investors price the risk that a resilient economy and substantial treasury issuance would impact the longer-term path of rates. By the end of the third quarter, pricing in the Fed funds futures market reflected a higher for longer stance by the Federal Reserve, pushing the expectations for cuts into the second-half of 2024. These trends intensified into October as the interest rates and interest rate volatility moved higher post quarter end. As shown in the lower-right chart, U.S. commercial banks further reduced their holdings of agency RMBS during the quarter, concurrent with run-off of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet, resulting in an increased reliance on money manager and overseas investment to support Agency RMBS valuations. While overseas investment in the asset class has been robust in recent months, mutual fund outflows dampened demand from our money manager community that was already overweight the sector with little room to add exposure. In addition, organic net supply of agency mortgages to the market increased during the quarter housing seasonals strengthened. While the remaining specified pools held by FDIC were liquidated by the end of the quarter, taken together supply and demand technicals worsened during the quarter, providing a tenuous environment as interest rate volatility increased. Slide five provides more detail on the Agency RMBS market. In the left chart, we show 30-year current coupon Agency RMBS performance versus U.S. treasuries since yearend, highlighting the third quarter in gray. Production coupon agency RMBS performed poorly during the quarter as investor expectations for monetary and fiscal policy fluctuated, leading to sharply higher interest rate volatility. Current coupon valuations ended the quarter significantly lower versus treasuries. And Agency RBMS spreads widened approximately 20 to 25 basis points across the coupon stack. In addition, specified pool pay-ups continued to decline as interest rates increased as indicated in the chart on the top right. As shown in the lower right chart, the dollar roll market for TBA securities remained unattractive as more recent issuance with higher loan balance have a less attractive pre-payment profile. And, the lack of consistent bank demand, negatively impacted technicals. Although Agency RMBS underperformed in October, the market did stabilize in the latter part of the month as investors selling dissipated and volatility subsided modestly. Slide 6 provides details on our Agency RMBS investments and portfolio changes during the quarter. Our portfolio of Agency RMBS decreased marginally over the quarter as the combination of higher interest rates and wider spreads led to lower prices on our assets. We remained focused in more attractively priced higher coupon, which are largely insulated from direct exposure to assets held by the FDIC and on the Federal reserves balance sheet. In addition, we remained exclusively invested in specified pools with no exposure to the deterioration in the dollar roll market for TBA securities. We continue to modestly improve the quality of our specified pool holdings by increasing our allocation to lower loan balance stories given more attractive valuations during the quarter. Although we anticipate elevated interest rate volatility to persist near-term, we believe current valuations on production coupon Agency RMBS largely priced in this risk represent attractive investment opportunities with current gross ROEs in the mid- to high-teens. Our remaining credit investments are detailed along side our agency CMO allocation on slide seven. Our credit allocation declined during the quarter to $34 million due to pay-downs. Our credit allocation remains high quality with 83% rated double A or higher. Our allocation to Agency interest only securities detailed on the right side of the slide seven remained unchanged. Totaling $78 million at quarter end. Although we anticipate limited near-term price appreciation in our credit and Agency IO investments, we believe these assets are attractive unlevered holdings that provide favorable yields. Slide eight details funding and hedge book at quarter end. Repurchase agreements collateralized by Agency RMBS remained at $5 billion. And, our weighted average repo cost increased to 5.4%, consistent with changes in short-term funding rates due to tightening monetary policy. Repo spreads were relatively steady during the quarter and counterparty appetite remained strong. Positively, we increased the hedges associated with those borrowings to $5 billion net notional of current pay-fixed receive-floating interest rate swaps. As you know, increasing our hedge notional to 99% of borrowings and mitigating the impact of higher borrowing rates on the earnings power of the company quarter. Our economic leverage ended the quarter modestly higher at 6.4 times debt to equity versus 5.9 times at the end of June. Mostly, reflecting the decline in book value over the quarter. Positively, our liquidity position at quarter end remained robust with $392 million of cash and unencumbered investments representing approximately 7% of our investment portfolio. Slide nine provides further detail on our interest rate swap portfolio. At the end of the third quarter, we held $5.9 billion notional of low cost pay-fixed swaps and $950 million notional of receive-fixed swaps. Given the significant challenges presented during the quarter, we modestly repositioned the hedge book to extend the weighted average maturity of pay-fixed swaps and reduce the maturity of our receive-fixed swaps. Because the tenure of our low cost pay-fixed swaps is over 7.5 years, we were largely able to avoid adding new pay-fixed swaps at higher rates as the durations on our Agency RMBS extended into the most recent sell-off, with our average pay-fixed rate increasing from 0.45% to 0.79% quarter-over-quarter. Slide 10 provides an update on our asset and hedge portfolios as of October 31, which should offer a helpful picture of the changes we made post-quarter-end. Since the end of the third quarter, we aggressively reduced leverage as elevated interest rate volatility led to short declines in our Agency RMBS valuations. As a result, our debt-to-equity leverage declined from 6.4 times to 4.3 times in October. Liquidity remained robust as our cash and unencumbered investments increased to $444 million. As you can see in the top-left chart, we remain allocated to higher coupon Agency RMBS, and our specified pool allocation is now of higher quality, with nearly 50% of our holdings in loan balance collateral. In addition, we also reduced the size of our hedge book commensurate with the reduction in our assets, with our pay-fixed swaps hedges declining from $5.9 billion at quarter end to $3.9 billion at the end of October. Positively, our average pay-fixed rate declined marginally from 0.79% to 0.76%, and the weighted average maturity of our hedges is now 8.6 years, providing support for the earnings power of the company. To conclude our prepared remarks, the third quarter of 2023 was yet another very challenging quarter for Agency RMBS investors as interest rate volatility increased sharply once again. We believe our bias for more attractively priced higher coupon specified pools leaves us well-positioned in the near-term given the potential for a further decline in interest rate volatility as the Federal Reserve seeks to conclude monetary policy tightening. Further, our liquidity position is robust as leverage remained well below historical averages for an Agency RMBS-focused strategy. As a result, IVR is well-positioned to navigate future mortgage market volatility and selectively capitalize on historically wide Agency RMBS spreads. While we anticipate potential near-term volatility as monetary policy tightening concludes, we believe current valuations provide a supportive backdrop for the long-term investment. Thank you for your continued support for Invesco Mortgage Capital. And now we will open the line for Q&A.