Thanks, John, and good morning to everyone listening to the call. I'll begin on Slide 4, which provides an overview of the interest rate markets over the past year. As depicted in the chart on the upper left, despite further easing of monetary policy in September, treasury yields declined only modestly during the quarter as the deterioration in employment data was offset by robust economic growth, fueled in part by the boom in AI investment. Positively, the yield curve continue to steepen with 2-year treasury yields falling 11 basis points, while 30-year yields were down just 4 basis points. The difference between 2-year and 30-year treasury yields ended the quarter at 112 basis points, roughly 65 basis points steeper than a year ago, and remain supportive of longer-term investments, such as our Agency RMBS and Agency CMBS. The chart in the upper right reflects changes in short-term funding rates over the past year, with the third quarter highlighted in gray. While financing capacity for our assets remained ample and haircuts unchanged, 1-month repo spread began to indicate funding pressures in late September and continued into October, widening approximately 5 basis points. Steady issuance of [ T-bills ] caused dealers to become very long collateral, squeezing balance sheet and putting upward pressure on repo rates. We believe that FOMC announcement on Wednesday to end quantitative tightening at the end of November was largely in response to this pressure, but further adjustments may be necessary before repo spreads can unwind the recent widening. Lastly, the bottom right chart highlights the significant decline in implied interest rate volatility since the middle of April. This improvement has provided a tailwind for risk assets in recent months, particularly Agency RMBS and is largely driven by diminishing tail risks across fiscal, monetary and trade policies as well as potential deregulation measures that should encourage greater investment in fixed income securities. Slide 5 provides more detail on the Agency mortgage market. In the upper left chart, we show 30-year current coupon performance versus U.S. treasuries over the past year, highlighting the third quarter in gray. Agency mortgage performance was impressive during the quarter as the decline in interest rate volatility supported persistent demand for money managers and mortgage REITs, while net supply continued to undershoot expectations. Although bank and overseas demand remains subdued, steady inflows into money managers and robust capital raising by mortgage REITs helped to offset the weakness resulting in strong returns for the sector. Third-year mortgage rates declined during the quarter as tighter mortgage spreads, lower interest rates and compression in the primary secondary spread led to a decline of nearly 50 basis points. This decline in mortgage rates dampened the performance of higher coupons relative to those lower in the stack as investors were reluctant to increase prepayment risk in their portfolios. While generic, collateral and discount coupons outperformed treasury hedges by 90 to 130 basis points, similarly generic collateral in 6% and 6.5% coupons outperformed by a more modest 30 to 70 basis points. In the upper right-hand chart, we show higher coupon specified pool pay-ups which are the premium investors pay for specified pools over generic collateral and are representative of the bonds that IVR owns. Positively, payoffs improved during the quarter, offsetting a portion of their underperformance relative to lower coupons given increased investor demand for additional prepayment protection and premium coupons. Although IVR's prepayment fees were relatively unchanged during the quarter at just over 10 CPR, higher coupons did indicate a faster refi response to the decline in mortgage rates in September, and we expect a similar response in speeds this month. This recent increase in refinancing activity is expected to be somewhat short-lived, however, as increased refi efficiencies result in swifter responses and reduced flag comps with November speeds expected to decline. We continue to believe that owning prepayment protection via specified pools, particularly in premium price holdings remains a beneficial way to hold attractively priced mortgage exposure. Slide 6 details our Agency RMBS investments and summarizes the investment portfolio changes during the quarter. Our Agency RMBS portfolio increased 13% quarter-over-quarter as we invested proceeds from ATM issuance and maintain leverage at book value improved. The majority of our net purchases occurred in 4.5% versus 5.5% coupons with a decline in our 6% and 6.5% allocations, a result of paydowns and the growth in the overall portfolio. Although we continue to focus our specified pool allocation on prepayment characteristics that are expected to perform well in both premium and discount environments. Price appreciation in our holdings has resulted in a higher percentage of our pools valued at premium dollar prices. Therefore, while we remain most comfortable with lower loan balance specified pool stories, we increased our exposure to borrowers with higher loan-to-value ratios, given our expectations for slowing on price appreciation resulting in a reduced refi response for these borrowers. Overall, we remain constructive on Agency RMBS as supply and demand technicals are favorable and lower levels of interest rate volatility should continue to encourage strong demand for the sector. We believe near-term risks have become more balanced following recent outperformance with nominal spreads tightening approximately 20 basis points during the quarter. However, valuations remain attractive with the current coupon spreads on a 5- and 10-year SOFR blend ending the quarter near 170 basis points, equating to leverage gross returns in the upper teens. Slide 7 provides detail on our Agency CMBS portfolio, risk premiums tightened during the quarter consistent with broader financial markets. Given the more attractive relative value in Agency RMBS, we did not add to our agency CMBS position during the quarter and maintained current holdings with our allocation declining modestly due to the growth in the portfolio. Despite the lack of new purchases, we continue to believe that Agency CMBS offers many benefits mainly through its prepayment protection and fixed maturities which reduced our sensitivity to interest rate volatility. Levered gross ROEs are in the low double digits and consistent with ROEs and lower coupon Agency RMBS, and we have been disciplined on adding exposure only when the relative value between Agency CMBS and Agency RMBS accurately reflects their unique risk profiles. Financing capacity has been robust as we continue to fund our positions with multiple counterparties at attractive levels. We will continue to monitor the sector for opportunities to increase our allocation as the relative value becomes attractive, recognizing the overall benefits to the portfolio as the sector diversifies risk associated with an agency RMBS portfolio. Slide 8 details our funding and hedging book at quarter end. Repurchase agreements collateralized by our Agency RMBS and Agency CMBS investments increased from $4.6 billion to $5.2 billion, consistent with the increase in our total assets while the total notional of our hedges increased from $4.3 billion to $4.4 billion as our hedge ratio declined from 94% to 85%. The table on the right provides further detail on our hedges at year-end. The composition of our hedges shifted modestly towards treasury futures quarter-over-quarter with 77% of our hedges consisting of interest rate swaps on a notional basis. While on a dollar duration basis, the allocation declined to 63% given the higher allocation of interest rate swaps closer to the front end of the curve. Swap spreads widened during the quarter, unwinding a portion of the tightening experienced in the second quarter, serving as a tailwind for our performance. Despite the recent widening, we continue to believe swap spreads are still historically tight and should continue to normalize, benefiting the company, and we maintain our preference for interest rate swaps over treasury futures. Slide 9 provides detail on our capital structure and highlights the improvement made in recent quarters to reduce our cost of capital. Further improvement in the capital structure remains a focus of our management team as we seek to prudently maximize shareholder returns. To conclude our prepared remarks, financial market volatility has declined notably since the beginning of the second quarter, resulting in strong performance from most risk assets in the last 5 months. IVR's economic return of 8.7% during the third quarter is a result of that positive momentum, but also reflects our disciplined approach to capital activity and our focus on shareholder returns. In recent years, we have taken significant yet prudent steps towards improving our capital structure and reducing the cost of capital to our common stock shareholders. We remain committed to that approach as we seek to further reduce expenses while enhancing returns and improving scale. We believe our liquidity position provides substantial cushion for further potential market stress while also providing sufficient capital to deploy into our target assets as the investment environment evolves. While we view near-term risks as somewhat balanced we believe further easing of monetary policy will lead to a steeper yield curve and lower interest rate volatility, both of which will provide a supportive backdrop for Agency mortgages over the long term. Thank you for your continued support for Invesco Mortgage Capital, and now we will open the line for Q&A.