Thanks, Scott. And hello, everyone. Let me walk through the details of our first quarter results, starting with originations. As Scott mentioned, we originated over $1.6 billion in line with the prior quarter and the high end of our guidance. Last quarter, we added Page 10 to our earnings presentation to illustrate the relative economics of the 4 primary programs we have at our disposal to sell or retain loan originations. Whole loan and structured certificate sales allow us to take more upfront economics and operate in a capital-like manner without credit risk, whereas loans that we hold or season on balance sheet provide the strongest returns. On Page 11, you can see the origination volumes of the 4 programs. The issuance in the quarter was once again led by our very successful structured certificate program, which was approximately $785 million of the originations in the quarter. We also sold $320 million of whole loans through the marketplace, accumulated $255 million into Held for Sale for our extended seasoning program to meet future marketplace investor demand for season loans. And we retained $285 million in our Held for Investment portfolio. This quarter, you saw us increase the amount of whole loans retained on our balance sheet between the Held for Investment and extended seasoning programs, which represented 32% of total originations, up from 17% in the prior quarter. We plan to maintain these higher levels of whole loan retention to offset the maturation of our existing portfolio, keeping our total loan portfolio essentially flat through the remainder of the year. Importantly, the total balance sheet will continue to grow as we add structured certificate securities throughout the year. Now, let's move on to pre-provision net revenue, or PPNR. PPNR was $48 million for the quarter and came in above our guidance range due to temporary outperformance on expenses, as well as rate-driven improvements in marketplace economics. Let's move into the 2 components of PPNR, starting with revenue, where you can see the detail on Page 12 of our earnings presentation. Total revenue for the quarter was $181 million compared to $186 million in the prior quarter. Let me break revenue down into the 2 components starting with non-interest income. Non-interest income was $58 million in the quarter, up from $54 million in the prior quarter. The improvement was primarily driven by better marketplace loan pricing as we saw continued strong demand combined with lower interest rates in the period. The pricing benefit was partially offset by lower origination fees as we retained more loans in our Held for Investment portfolio, where the origination fee is deferred over the life of the loan. Now, on to net interest income, which was $123 million in the quarter compared to $131 million in the prior quarter. The change in net interest income was primarily due to the continued shift towards putting structured certificate securities on the balance sheet, which have no provision due to the risk-remote nature of the A-note security, but come with a lower asset yield. This is the third quarter since we started the shift in balance sheet composition. And going forward, we should see modest improvements in net interest income with further benefits when the Fed begins to lower interest rates. As Scott noted, we purchased a $235 million LendingClub issued loan portfolio from a marketplace investor at the end of the quarter, which we accounted for under fair value, and funded it with short-term federal home loan bank advances that have been repaid as of this call. As you have seen us do in the past, we will be opportunistic about secondary portfolio purchases of LendingClub issued paper. We see this as a way to quickly deploy excess capital and earn attractive returns while providing liquidity for our marketplace investors. Risk-adjusted revenue, which is net revenue less provision, increased to $149 million this quarter from $144 million in the prior quarter, which was the result of the lower provision as we continued growing the structured certificate and extended seasoning programs. We introduced this metric last quarter as we believe it illustrates the lower risk nature of the assets we have been using to grow the balance sheet. The continued evolution on the asset side of the balance sheet has had the expected impact on net interest margin. On Slide 13, you can see that our net interest margin was 5.8% in the quarter compared to 6.4% in the prior quarter. We expect the rate of net interest margin decline to moderate going forward from what we've experienced in recent quarters, assuming the Fed has done increasing rates. Now, please turn to Slide 14 of our earnings presentation, which refers to the second component of PPNR, non-interest expense. Non-interest expense was $132 million in the quarter, compared to $130 million in the prior quarter. While we will continue to remain disciplined on expenses, we do expect to step up in variable spend to support growth as well as higher depreciation from some of the recently completed technology builds you heard Scott discuss earlier. Now, let's turn to provision. On Page 15, you will see provision for credit losses was $32 million for the quarter compared to $42 million in the prior quarter. The sequential decline was a result of lower incremental provision on older vintages, partially offset by higher day one CECL provision from the higher retained loans in the period. As we indicated last quarter, we believe delinquencies and net charge-offs on our Held for Investment portfolio have peaked and are beginning to decline as the portfolio ages past the point of peak dollar net charge-offs. Delinquencies also benefited from seasonal impacts, and to a lesser extent, temporary hardship plans tailored to the inflationary environment. On Page 16, we have updated our lifetime loss expectations for each of our annual vintages. We are seeing stable performance in line with the expectations we provided last quarter, and the marginal ROEs remain very strong across the vintages. As a reminder, we have applied a higher qualitative reserve to the 2023 vintage, given the longer remaining life compared to the more seasoned vintages. And on Page 17, we have included the illustrative example of the credit life cycle of a single hypothetical vintage. We noted on our last call that the dollar charge-offs peak at approximately 1.5 years. Our Held for Investment portfolio is now 16.5 months old, and we saw that net charge-offs were stable sequentially as we expected. Going forward, we expect dollar net charge-offs to begin to decline as the portfolio continues to season. As a reminder, our end-period net charge-off rate will continue to increase as the portfolio ages, but on lower outstanding balances. We have already taken an upfront CECL provision for future net charge-offs on a discounted basis, which is reflected in the portfolio allowance. Due to this timing dynamic, we continue to expect lower in-period CECL provisions compared to dollar net charge-offs in the coming quarters, and our in-period net charge-off rate will continue to increase as the portfolio ages, but on lower outstanding balances. This is in line with our previous expectations as our portfolio ages. Now let's move to taxes. Taxes in the quarter were $4.3 million, or 26% of pre-tax income. As I've mentioned before, we will have some variability in the effective tax rate from quarter-to-quarter, but our long-term tax rate expectation is 27%. That brings us to net income. Net income for the quarter was $12 million, or $0.11 per share, and our tangible book value per common share increased to $10.61. As Scott mentioned, this marks our 12th consecutive quarter of profitability. Now, let's move on to guidance. For the second quarter, we anticipate stepping up originations to a range of $1.6 billion to $1.8 billion, given the success we're seeing from our recent initiatives that are driving efficient, credit-worthy borrower acquisition. Our PPNR guidance range of $30 million to $40 million reflects the forecasted originations growth and related variable expense, offset by the revenue impacts on sales price from interest rates moving higher in Q2, and the expense growth from strategic initiatives I discussed earlier. And we plan to continue to deliver positive net income in the second quarter, though not at the level seen in Q1, which benefited from the one-time items I discussed earlier. As we look beyond Q2 to the back half of the year, there are a few trends I would like to call out. As Scott mentioned, we are seeing positive early performance on our new product and marketing initiatives, which we expect to drive incremental originations throughout the year. We expect to be able to maintain PPNR in the back half of the year in line with our Q2 guidance, with modestly increasing revenue offsetting the increase in expenses related to volume growth. While it's looking less likely that we will get significant rate relief in 2024, any potential reductions would be an accelerant to growing revenue. With that, we'll open it up for Q&A.