Thanks, Ray. Slide 11 shows, vehicle production and key exchange rates for the third quarter. Global production increased 4% compared to the same period last year and was up 8% on a Lear's sales weighted basis. Production volumes increased by 9% in North America and by 6% in Europe, while volumes in China were down 1%. From a currency standpoint, the US dollar weakened against the euro but strengthened against the RMB compared to 2022. Slide 12 highlights Lear's growth compared to the market. Total company revenue growth lagged the market by one percentage point, primarily driven by unfavorable platform mix and several key programs in North America. The largest driver of the unfavorable platform mix reflected downtime in seating at General Motors full-size truck plants. Excluding the impact of the downtime, total company sales growth would have been in line with the overall market. The UAW strike at GM's Wentzville facility and Ford Chicago facility also had a modest negative impact on seating revenue. In E-Systems growth of the market of three percentage points was driven by our backlog in all regions, as well as favorable platform mix in Europe. Europe sales outperformed industry production by eight points with both business segments benefiting from higher volumes on the Land Rover Range Rover, Range Rover Sports and Defender. New conquest programs such as the BMW 5 and 7 Series in Seating and new business with a global OEM as well as BMW, Mercedes and Fisker and E-Systems contributed to the strong growth in the region as well. Through the first three quarters, total company growth over market was two percentage points with Seating growing one point above market and E-Systems growing five points above market. Turning to slide 13 I will highlight our financial results for the third quarter of 2023. Sales increased 10% year-over-year to $5.8 billion. Excluding the impact of foreign exchange, commodities and acquisitions sales were up 7%, reflecting increased production on key Lear platforms and the addition of new business in both segments. Core operating earnings were $267 million compared to $235 million last year. The increase in earnings resulted from the impact of higher production at Lear platforms and the addition of new business. Adjusted earnings per share increased 23% to $2.87 as compared to $2.33 a year ago. In addition to higher core earnings our adjusted EPS benefited from higher equity earnings and a lower share count reflecting the benefit of our share repurchase program. Operating cash flow generated in the quarter was $404 million, compared to $252 million in 2022. The increase in operating cash flow was due to an improvement in working capital and higher earnings relative to last year. Slide 14 explains the variance in sales and adjusted operating margins in the Seating segment. Sales for the third quarter were $4.3 billion, an increase of $397 million or 10% from 2022 driven primarily by an increase in volumes on Lear platforms and our strong backlog. Key backlog programs include the BMW 5 and 7 series and Batch Hornet [ph] in Europe; the Chevrolet Colorado, GMC Canyon, and Mercedes EQE SUV in North America, as well as the [indiscernible] and leather sales for the BYD Denza D9 program in China. Excluding the impact of commodities, foreign exchange and acquisitions, sales were up 6%. Core operating earnings improved to $275 million, up $20 million or 8% from 2022 with adjusted operating margins of 6.4%. As expected, operating margins were modestly lower due to the impact of higher engineering spending and launch costs to support new business awards. This was partially offset by the benefit from higher volumes on their platforms and our margin accretive backlog. Seating margins in the third quarter were negatively impacted by production disruptions related to the UAW strike, GM full-size truck downtime and volume reductions and premium costs related to shipping delays at the Mexican border. Slide 15 explains the variance in sales and adjusted operating margins in the E-Systems segment. Sales for the third quarter were $1.5 billion, an increase of $143 million or 11% from 2022. Excluding the impact of foreign exchange and commodities, sales were up 9% driven primarily by our strong backlog and higher volumes on key platforms. Key backlog platforms include new programs with a global EV OEM and Fisker in North America and Europe, as well as the Ford Super Duty trucks in GM Hummer EV and Silverado EV in North America. Core operating earnings improved to $79 million or 5.3% of sales compared to $53 million and 3.9% of sales in 2022. The improvement in margins reflected higher volumes on Lear platforms and our margin-accretive backlog and improvement in commodity costs and strong net operating performance. The positive net performance was driven primarily by efficiency improvements at our North American manufacturing facilities, resolution of key commercial negotiations with customers, facilitating recovery of costs due to the commodities and wage inflation and restructuring savings. Moving to slide 16, we highlight our strong balance sheet and liquidity profile, a major competitive advantage for Lear in today's higher interest rate environment. We do not have any near-term debt maturities. Our earliest bond maturity is in 2027 and our debt structure has a weighted average life of approximately 13.5 years. Our cost of debt is low, averaging approximately 4%. In addition, we have $3 billion of available liquidity. We are on track to meet or exceed our target of 80% free cash flow conversion for the year. We remain committed to returning excess cash to our shareholders and accelerated our share repurchases in the third quarter. During the quarter, we repurchased $75 million of stock which was more than the first and second quarters combined. Our current share repurchase authorization has approximately $1.1 billion remaining, which allows us to repurchase shares through December 31, 2024. Now shifting to our 2023 outlook. Slide 17 provides global vehicle production volumes and currency assumptions that form the basis of our full year outlook. We base our production assumptions on several sources, including internal estimates, customer production schedules and S&P forecasts. At the midpoint of our guidance range, we assume that global industry production will be 7% higher than in 2022, an increase of 3 percentage points or two points on a Lear sales weighted basis from our prior guidance reflecting higher production in Europe and China. Our global production assumptions are generally aligned with the latest S&P forecast. From a currency perspective, our 2023 outlook assumes an average euro exchange rate of $1.08 per euro and an average Chinese RMB exchange rate of RMB 7.02 to the dollar. Slide 18 provides more detail on our current outlook. We are increasing our 2023 outlook for net sales, core operating earnings and free cash flow from the midpoint of our prior outlook. We are increasing our outlook for restructuring costs by $25 million to fund investments that will optimize the manufacturing footprint of our new thermal comfort segment and to reduce capacity in Europe to better align with current and future customer production plans. At the same time, we are reducing our outlook for capital spending by $25 million, primarily as a result of slower customer ramp-up plans on various new electric vehicles. In the third quarter, we lost approximately $25 million of revenue due to the UAW strike. Based on the plants that are on strike as of today, we are losing approximately $60 million of revenue per week. Based on the late news from last night the revenue impacts will drop to $35 million per week once Ford resumes production. Consistent with our prior guidance, the full year financial outlook assumes a $350 million revenue impact from industry disruptions, related to the ongoing UAW strike, including approximately $325 million in the fourth quarter. Through the end of this week, the cumulative revenue impact of the UAW strike is approximately $170 million. This leaves approximately $180 million of revenue contingency for the remainder of the fourth quarter. Slide 19 highlights our fourth quarter outlook for sales and core operating earnings in Seating and E-systems as well as the outlook excluding the assumed impact of the ongoing UAW labor strike. In Seating, the midpoint of our fourth quarter revenue outlook includes approximately $230 million of assumed loss revenue from industry disruptions related to the UAW strike. The midpoint of our fourth quarter operating income outlook is 6.8% including negative margin impact of approximately 70 basis points due to the assumed strike impact. In E-Systems, the midpoint of our fourth quarter revenue outlook includes approximately $95 million of assumed loss revenue related to the UAW strike. The midpoint of our fourth quarter operating income outlook for E-Systems was 5.5%, including negative margin impact of approximately 90 basis points due to the assumed strike impact. In the appendix of the presentation, we included a summary of our current full year outlook for Seating and E-Systems revenue and operating margins as well as a full year outlook that removes the assumed impact of the UAW strike. At the midpoint of our guidance, our full year Seating margins are forecasted at 6.8% our E-Systems margins at 4.6% and total company margins at 4.8%. This is an improvement of 10 basis points from the prior outlook for Seating and total company margins. Excluding the impact of the strike full year margins would be 7% in Seating 4.9% in E-Systems and 5% for the total company. Now, I'll turn it back to Ray for some closing thoughts.