Thank you, Laura. I'll begin with our third quarter result summary on slide six. Adjusted operating earnings of $315 million were up from this year's second quarter, primarily due to higher fee and spread income. Similarly, our third quarter adjusted book value attributable to common shareholders was up from the second quarter due to non-operating net hedging gains and healthy adjusted operating earnings. In the appendix of our earnings presentation, we have included additional general account investment portfolio details that provide breakdowns on both U.S. GAAP and statutory bases, excluding the assets reinsured to third-parties or funds withheld assets. The information provides helpful insight into our highly rated and diversified commercial mortgage loan office portfolio. As you can see, Jackson remains conservatively positioned with only 1% exposure to below investment grade securities on a statutory basis, excluding funds withheld assets. As a reminder, we will complete our annual assumptions review process in the coming quarter and will disclose the results of the review in our fourth quarter and full-year earnings release. This process entails a thorough and comprehensive assessment of our assumptions and models performed every year. Slide seven outlines the notable items included in adjusted operating earnings for the third quarter. Results from limited partnership investments, which report on a one quarter lag, were $13 million lower in the current quarter than they would have been had returns matched our long-term expectations. In the third quarter of 2022, limited partnership income was also below our long-term expectations, but to a greater degree, creating a comparative pre-tax benefit in the current quarter of $41 million. In addition to this notable item, both third quarter 2022 and third quarter 2023 benefited from a lower effective tax rate relative to the 15% long-term guidance. The benefit in the prior year's quarter was larger due to a higher level of pre-tax operating earnings excluding notables. Adjusted for both the notable item and the tax rate difference, earnings per share were $3.77 for the current quarter, compared to $4.52 in the prior year's current quarter. Key drivers of the year-over-year difference include the previously mentioned increase in VA fixed option crediting rates due to regulatory minimum requirements and the change in income from operating derivatives resulting from higher short-term interest rates. Additionally, the prior year's quarter included a gain from the experience update for future policy benefits that did not repeat in the current quarter. It is important to note that we saw positive sequential trends as the earnings per share excluding notables in the second quarter of this year with $3.54. Slide eight illustrates the reconciliation of our third quarter pre-tax adjusted operating earnings of $355 million to pre-tax income attributable to Jackson Financial of $3.5 billion. Net income includes some changes in liability values under U.S. GAAP accounting that will not align with our hedging assets. We focus our hedging on the economics of the business as well as our statutory capital position, and choose to accept the resulting U.S. GAP non-operating volatility. As shown in the table, the total guaranteed benefits and hedging results, or net hedge result, was a gain of $2.8 billion in the third quarter. Starting from the left side of the chart, you see a robust guaranteed benefit fee stream of $784 million, providing significant resources to support the hedging of our guarantees. These fees are calculated based on the benefit base rather than the account value, which provides stability to the guarantee fee stream, protecting our hedge budget when markets decline. Consistent with our practice, all guarantee fees are presented in non-operating income to align with the related hedging and liability movements. There was a $271 million loss on freestanding derivatives, primarily due to losses on interest rate hedges in a quarter where interest rates were up across the yield curve. Movements in net market risk benefits or MRB provided a $2.4 billion gain that more than offset the freestanding derivative movements due in large part to these same interest rate increases. Unlike the statutory framework, the GAAP reserves for variable annuity benefits do not have a minimum requirement and can become negative, switching from a liability to an asset position. This happened during the second quarter of 2023 and continued into the third quarter as the strong economic profile of our enforced book led to an MRB net asset of approximately $3 billion. Non-operating results also included $462 million of gains from business reinsured to third-party. This was primarily due to a gain on a funds withheld reinsurance treaty that includes an embedded derivative, as well as the related net investment income. These non-operating items, which can be volatile from period-to-period, are offset by changes in accumulated other comprehensive income or AOCI in the funds withheld account related to reinsurance, resulting in a minimal net impact on Jackson's adjusted book value. Furthermore, these items do not impact our statutory capital or free cash flow. Our segment results start on slide nine with retail annuities. Jackson continues to remain an industry leader in the annuities market and our traditional VA sales have stabilized over the past four quarters, which is consistent with VA industry trends. As Laura highlighted, our RILA sales growth puts us on pace of over $3 billion annually and has driven improved overall sales diversification. Sales of annuities without lifetime benefit increased to 48% of our total retail sales, up from 41% in the third quarter of last year. While we expect this percentage to vary somewhat over time based on market conditions and consumer demand, our RILA offering has contributed to diversification within our sales mix. When viewed through a net flow lens, the growth sales we are generating in RILA and other spread products translated to more than $800 million of non-VA net flow in the third quarter of 2023. In addition to partially offsetting net outflows and variable annuities, these net flows provide valuable economic diversification and capital efficiency benefits. Importantly, our overall sales mix remains efficient from the standpoint of new business streams. Looking at pre-tax adjusted operating earnings for our retail annuity segment on slide 10, we show positive underlying trends as demonstrated by AUM growth across our annuity product categories, despite being down from the prior year's third quarter. Higher equity markets are benefiting our variable annuity count value and strong net flows are driving growth in RILA fixed and fixed index annuity account values. Furthermore, the positive momentum for our enhanced RILA suite positions us well for ongoing success as we enter the fourth quarter. Our other operating segments are shown on slide 11. For our institutional segment, sales for the third quarter totaled $112 million and account values were $8.7 billion. Pre-tax adjusted operating earnings were essentially flat from the prior year. Our Closed Life and Annuity Block segment reported lower pre-tax adjusted operating earnings compared to the prior year. Under LDTI we will now have some additional volatility in this segment, due to the quarterly experience update for future policy benefits. The prior year's quarter included a gain on this line item that did not repeat in the current period. While this figure can be a positive or negative in any given quarter, we would expect it to net to a small number over time. You can see this in our financial supplement where the last five quarters ranged from a loss of $16 million to a gain of $36 million, totaling to a gain of only $25 million on a cumulative basis. Slide 12 summarizes our third quarter capital position. As Laura mentioned, we returned $123 million to our shareholders in the third quarter through a combination of dividends and share repurchases and remain committed to reaching our full-year capital return target of $450 million to $550 million. We were active in share buybacks during the third quarter, which totaled 1.9 million shares or $71 million. We generated significant regulatory capital in the period as our variable annuity book remains in a healthy position and our hedging performed well. Our total adjusted capital increased by approximately $700 million to $4.5 billion, reflecting strong base contract cash flows, positive variable annuity net guarantee results, and related tax benefits. This was only slightly offset by higher required capital, which was driven by a decline in equity markets, partially offset by higher interest rates. The combined effects of these items led to our estimated RBC ratio rising above our 425% to 500% target range. During the third quarter our hedge spend was within the guarantee fees collected as we benefited from a more favorable hedging environment. Our holding company asset position at the end of the first quarter was nearly $1.4 billion, including over $900 million in cash and highly liquid assets, which continues to be well above our minimum buffer. Consistent with our second quarter commentary, Jackson Financial completed the planned sale of limited partnership assets in October. Giving effect to that sale, JFI had nearly $1.4 billion in cash and highly liquid securities, a very strong level of liquidity which provides significant financial flexibility. We are retiring the $600 million senior debt maturity later this month. Following that retirement, we have no debt maturities until 2027. Upon our separation, we made it clear that we were committed to maintaining a strong balance sheet and rating profile. We have delivered on this commitment over time as illustrated by our quarterly reporting of estimated RBC ratios consistently within or above our target range, a conservative leverage ratio that has improved since separation, and a deliberate balanced approach to capital return to shareholders. We have been pleased that our financial results have consistently compared favorably to rating agency triggers and we remain committed to a continued improvement of our profile in the future. In addition to our strong financial performance, we have made significant progress on diversifying our sales mix. We are proud of our execution and believe we are doing the right things to strengthen our credit profile for the future. Stability of our capital position is very important and is driving our efforts toward obtaining a more economic framework that is not adversely impacted by the cash surrender value floor. As previously stated, our goals are reduced statutory capital volatility, more efficient hedging, and more intuitive results for our external stakeholders. I will now turn it back over to Laura for closing remarks.