Thanks, Justin. Starting with our multifamily business which is largely suburban and totals 38,000 units. Our portfolio produces $270 million in estimated annual NOI to KW which represents 55% of our stabilized portfolio. Our multifamily development and lease-up portfolio totals an additional 38,000 units, which once stabilized we expect to add $43 million to estimated annual NOI by the end of 2025. Globally, same-property revenue grew by 4% with NOI up approximately 3% in Q4, as we continue to see many of the same trends from the prior quarter. In the US, we saw seasonal leasing trends pick up in the fourth quarter with renewal leasing spreads totaling 3.3% and loss to lease totaling approximately 2% at quarter end. We are encouraged with the improvements we saw in January with renewal spreads increasing to 3.8% and asking rents of 2%. In our largest apartment region, in the Mountain West, we saw occupancies improved by 1.5% leading to revenue growth of 3% and NOI growth of 2%. Our Mountain West assets are diversified across six states Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Arizona and Idaho. Our Mountain West portfolio's average rents are priced at an attractive $600 and we believe these markets will continue to draw residents seeking a more affordable higher quality of life. In our California portfolio, we made great progress working through delinquencies and re-leasing units while also seeing lower levels of bad debt. This led to strong revenue growth of over 5% and NOI growth of 4%. Overall, we have recaptured approximately two-thirds of our units from nonpaying tenants in 2023 with our California assets still seeing elevated levels of legal and turnover costs and currently having a loss-to-lease of 4%. The region is set up for further NOI growth as we work through the remaining delinquencies. Overall, we believe renter fundamentals in the US remain healthy. The high cost of homeownership and continued household formation will drive further demand for rental housing, while a noticeable decline in construction starts should moderate the supply side. The stats I just walked through however run contrary to the change in fair values that were reported on some of our multifamily co-investment properties in 2023. To give an example we have a nine property apartment portfolio in which we sold a 49% stake to a large institutional investor in 2021. Since that time, the NOI on those assets has grown by 17%. And the operating cash flow after debt service on our 3.62% fixed rate debt with an average maturity of 5.5 years has grown by more than 20% including growth of 10% in 2023 alone. However, due to increases in implied cap rates, off of a limited transaction data and based on third-party appraisals, we took a $40 million non-cash mark-to-market loss on these assets during 2023. We have no intention to sell any of these assets in the short term, as we continue to grow the cash flows and complete the business plan. At our Vintage Housing affordable portfolio, we saw strong revenue growth of almost 10% driven by increasing levels of area median income resulting in a real robust NOI growth of 7%. In Q4, we stabilized 161 unit property, which was the fourth vintage property stabilized in 2023. We have another 1600 units in our development pipeline which will grow the portfolio to 12,000 stabilized units which is more than double than the 5,500 units we initially acquired back in 2015. There continues to be a strong need for affordable housing in the country. While our developments routinely have long wait list of potential renters. As such we continue to explore new opportunities to grow our vintage portfolio. Moving over to Dublin, our portfolio there remains close to full at 97% occupancy at year end. Last year we delivered almost 800 new units, which are over 50% leased today and we remain on track to deliver another 230 units next month. Our leasing on these new developments continues to perform ahead of our business plan as a result of the significant structural undersupply of rental housing in Dublin and the continued growth of the Irish economy. Turning to our office portfolio our office NOI is largely derived from our high-quality assets located in Dublin as well as in the U.K. We saw strong performance in our Dublin stabilized portfolio with occupancy of 95% and same property NOI increasing by 6% due to successful rent reviews which as a reminder has a unique feature allowing it mark-to-market on rents during the lease term. Excluding our development asset, our stabilized portfolio in Dublin totaled nine properties with very limited space available with the majority of the assets 100% occupied. Overall, same-property revenue and NOI in our European office portfolio was up slightly in the quarter, which contributed to 2% NOI growth for the year. Our stabilized portfolio in Europe is well leased to a solid roster of tenants with a weighted average lease term of 7.7 years to expiration and healthy occupancy of 94%. In the U.S., in Q4, we stabilized an office asset in suburban Los Angeles adding approximately $5 million to estimated annual NOI. In total, our consolidated U.S. office portfolio accounts for only 6% of our total estimated annual NOI. Now, transitioning over to the key platforms within our investment management business, starting with credit. As Bill mentioned, our credit platform grew by an impressive 148% in 2023 and today represents 56% of our total fee-bearing capital. We have successfully on-boarded the 38 person team from Pac-West who are now fully vertically integrated and working through a pipeline of over $1 billion in new potential construction loan opportunities with a focus on the multifamily sector. The platform's economics continue to be very attractive. KW's ownership interest in these new loans is 2.5% and the returns have benefited from the high interest rate environment. Today, we are able to generate unlevered returns including fees on our invested capital of over 20%, while lending to very high-quality borrowers at low leverage points. The team's long-term successful track record, strong relationships, and the lack of traditional lenders in the market positions us extremely well to deploy the $4 billion of dry powder and continue expanding this platform in 2024 and beyond. Along with our credit business, our industrial portfolio is another important platform within our investment management business. Fundamentals for our European industrial portfolio remain healthy with supply chain pressures undersupply in certain markets and continued strength in the occupational markets, all leading to strong demand. Our portfolio is over 98% occupied with the majority of our big vacant space under offer. We've also seen strong demand from our existing tenants to remain on our properties with tenants engaging and early discussions to extend their leases ahead of expiration. During the quarter, we added another asset to our EU industrial portfolio, which now totals $1.6 billion in assets under management. For the full year, we completed 78 leasing transactions delivering a 53% increase in rents, which was well ahead of our business plan. In-place rents are approximately 25% below market providing an opportunity for us to mark-to-market rents over the years ahead. Growing our industrial platform with our strategic partners continues to be a focus for us globally. Our European joint venture has over $1 billion in AUM capacity and we are monitoring a number of opportunities we hope to add to this platform. We also have over two million square feet of industrial in the US where our focus has been on small and mid-Bay properties with a significant embedded loss-to-lease. With that I'd like to pass it back to Bill.