Thanks, Frank, and good afternoon, everyone. Our adjusted net loss decreased from $59 million in the first quarter of 2023 to $38 million in the first quarter of this year due both to higher revenues and lower expenses. During the first quarter, pull-through weighted rate lock volume was $4.7 billion, which represented 11% decrease from the first quarter of 2023 and reflected the impact of taking our origination platforms off-line for part of January in response to the cyber incident. Rate lock volume came in within the guidance we issued last quarter of $3.5 billion to $5.5 billion. Rate lock volume contributed to adjusted total revenue of $231 million compared to $226 million in the first quarter of 2023. We estimate first quarter revenue was adversely impacted by approximately $22 million from the time our systems were off-line and were unable to take customer locks. But bear in mind that we also did not incur associated volume-related expenses with that lost revenue. Our loan origination volume was $4.6 billion for the quarter, a decrease of 8% from the first quarter of 2023. This was also within the guidance we issued last quarter of between $3.5 billion and $5.5 billion. The year-over-year increase in revenue is primarily a result of higher servicing fee income and pull-through weighted gain on sale margin. Our pull-through weighted gain on sale margin for the first quarter came in at 274 basis points, within our guidance of 270 to 300 basis points and compared to 226 basis points in the first quarter of 2023. Our higher gain on sale margin was primarily due to an overall increase in the profit margins of our loan production. We also benefited from a lower loss provision due to improved loan quality and a higher profit margin and volume on our HELOC production. Turning now to our servicing portfolio. The unpaid principal balance of our servicing portfolio increased slightly to $142.3 billion from $141.7 billion from the end of the first quarter 2023. During the quarter, we opportunistically monetized a portion of our portfolio by selling Ginnie Mae MSRs totaling $3 billion of UPB. Servicing fee income increased from $120 million in the first quarter of 2023 to $124 million in the first quarter of 2024 due in part to higher earnings credits on custodial balances from higher interest rates. We hedge our servicing portfolio, so we do not record the full impact of the changes in fair value in the results of our operations. We believe this strategy protects us against volatility in our earnings and liquidity. Our strategy for hedging the servicing portfolio is dynamic and we adjust our hedge positions in reaction to changing interest rate environments. We believe our servicing portfolio is well protected against potential rising defaults. As of March 31, the weighted average FICO was 736, the weighted average coupon was 3.5% and the weighted average LTV at origination was 72%. These characteristics contributed to a low delinquency rate with only 1% of the portfolio more than 60 days past due at quarter end and should generate reliable ongoing revenue during these uncertain economic times. A major component of Vision 2025 is to align our expense base with the smaller mortgage market and create efficiencies to improve operating leverage and financial performance over time. Our total expenses for the first quarter of 2024 decreased by $7 million or 2% from the prior year quarter. The primary drivers of this decrease were lower personnel-related costs driven by head count falling by approximately 600 FTE during the period and lower marketing costs. Our expenses would have decreased more substantially if it hadn't been for the cyber incident, which added $15 million in net cost to our results. Our volume-related expenses, consisting of commissions and direct origination expenses, increased by $2 million from the year-ago quarter despite lower origination volumes. Part of the cyber-related costs incurred during the quarter were to support our loan officers by compensating them for lost commissions. We expect these costs to correlate with volume again, starting with the second quarter. Restructuring related and asset impairment charges totaled $4 million, up from $1.7 million in the first quarter of 2023, primarily due to the ongoing impact of our supplemental productivity improvement program targeting $120 million of annualized earnings improvements expected to benefit 2024. Through the end of April 2024, we have confirmed $112 million or 93% of our targeted improvements. These are primarily achieved through decreased third-party vendor spend, salary expenses and reduced real estate-related costs. We expect to action the remainder of the planned savings in the second quarter. During the first quarter, we also accrued $1.1 million of legal expenses related to the expected settlement of legacy litigation compared to none in the prior year quarter. Excluding the cost of the cyber incident, restructuring and asset impairment charges and the litigation settlement accrual, we accomplished meaningful operating expense savings, reducing adjusted expenses by 8% from $313 million in the first quarter of 2023 to $288 million in the first quarter of 2024. Looking ahead to the second quarter, we expect origination volume of between $5 billion and $7 billion, and we expect pull-through weighted lock volume of between $4.5 billion and $6.5 billion. Volume guidance reflects the seasonal increase in activity in home-buying activity tempered by the recent increase in interest rates, increasing cost to the consumer. We also expect our second quarter pull-through weighted gain on sale margin to be between 260 and 290 basis points, which also reflects the recent increase in interest rates. During the second quarter, we expect expenses will increase somewhat, primarily due to higher commissions, marketing and origination expenses, reflecting increased volume quarter-over-quarter, offset somewhat by the absence of cyber-related costs after the first quarter. As we mentioned on our last call, we are continuing to evaluate our capital structure, including options available to address our unsecured notes maturing in the fourth quarter of 2025. We believe that by addressing these notes in the near term, we will derisk the outlook for the company for the benefit of all stakeholders. We'll share more as we get closer to executing on our plans. Our cost reset has allowed us to maintain a strong liquidity position, ending the quarter with over $600 million of cash and, at the same time, supporting reinvestment in critical platforms and programs. While the recent increase in interest rates have put pressure on market volume expectations, we continue to aggressively focus on our plan to return to profitability. With that, we're ready to turn it back to the operator for Q&A. Operator?