Great. Thanks, Michal. I'll review highlights of our Q1 results and provide our expectations for Q2 and the full year 2025, and then we'll take some questions. In short, our Q1 financial results were very solid, and our experience with regard to the California wildfires proved out our conservative underwriting approach, a healthy product mix, and the protection afforded by a thoughtful reinsurance strategy. In force premium grew 27% to just above $1 billion, while customer count increased by 21% to $2.5 million. Premium per customer increased 4% versus the prior year to $396, driven primarily by rate increases. Annual retention, or ADR, was 84%, a 4% decrease since this time last year, and down slightly versus 86% in the prior quarter. In broad strokes, we saw an unfavorable impact to ADR from our continuing effort to improve the profitability of our home book of about 4 points, about 2 points unfavorable from our pay per-mile car product, and about 2 points favorable from the rest of the book. We expect ADR to normalize and resume improvement over the coming quarters. Gross earned premium in Q1 increased 24% as compared to the prior year to $234 million, in line with IFP growth. Revenue in Q1 increased 27% from the prior year to $151 million. The growth in revenue was driven by the increase in gross earned premium, a slightly higher effective seating commission rate under our quota share reinsurance, and a 26% increase in investment income. Our gross loss ratio was 78% for Q1, as compared to 79% in Q1, 2024 and 63% in Q4, 2024. Excluding the total impact of CATs in Q1, which was roughly 19 percentage points, our gross loss ratio ex-CAT was 59%. Total gross prior period development had a roughly 8% favorable impact, with a negligible portion of that driven by CAT. We saw this favorable prior period development across all products, with the exception of pet, with the largest impact in our homeowners' multi-apparel business. On a net basis, prior period development had a roughly 10% favorable impact, of which 1% was from CAT. Trailing 12 months or TTM loss ratio was about 73%, or 10 points better year-on-year and stable sequentially. All of these insurance metrics and more are included in our insurance supplement that you'll find at the end of our shareholder letter. Gross profit increased 11% as compared to the prior year, driven primarily by premium growth offset by the California FAIR plan impact, while adjusted gross profit increased 25%, driven primarily by premium growth. Operating expenses, excluding loss and loss adjustment expense, increased 29% to $127 million in Q1 as compared to the prior year, driven primarily by an increase in growth spend and the impact of the FAIR plan Assessment. Other insurance expense grew 51% in Q1 versus the prior year, driven primarily by the impact of the FAIR plan assessment. Total sales and marketing expense increased by $13 million or 42% primarily due to increased growth spend of approximately $18 million, offset by a stock compensation benefit related to the Chewy warrant termination. Total growth spend in the quarter was $38 million, nearly double the $20 million in the prior year quarter. We continue to utilize our synthetic agents growth funding program and have continued to finance 80% of our growth spend. As a reminder you'll see a 100% of our growth spend flow through the P&L as always while the impact of the growth mechanism is visible on the cash flow statement and the balance sheet. And the net financing to date is $102 million as of the end of the quarter. Technology development expense was up just 5% year-on-year to $22 million, while G&A expense increased 20% as compared to the prior year to $36 million, primarily due to the growth in interest expense from our financing agreement. Personnel expense and headcount control continue to be a high priority, and total headcount is up just slightly, about 2% as compared to the prior year at $1,260, while the top line IFP, as a reminder, grew fully 27%. Net loss was $62 million in Q1, or a loss of $0.86 per share as compared to a net loss of $47 million or a $0.67 per share loss in the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA loss was $47 million in Q1 versus $34 million EBITDA loss in the prior year. Our total cash, cash equivalents and investments ended the quarter at approximately $996 million, up $69 million versus Q1 of last year, and down $25 million versus the prior quarter, primarily driven by the impact of the wildfires. With these metrics in mind, I'll outline our specific financial expectations for the second quarter and for the full year 2025. From a growth spend perspective, we expect to invest roughly $45 million in Q2 to generate profitable customers with a healthy lifetime value. This amount will likely increase slightly in Q3 and then may decline somewhat in Q4 to a level similar to the Q1 growth spend rate, totaling roughly $170 million for the year. This expected quarterly spend pattern is fairly similar to prior years. For the second quarter of 2025, we expect in force premium at June 30 of between $1.061 billion and $1.064 billion. Gross earned premium between $246 million and $248 million. Revenue between $157 million and $159 million. And an adjusted EBITDA loss of between $44 million and $41 million, stock-based compensation expense of approximately $16 million, and a weighted average share count of approximately 73 million shares. For the full year 2025, we expect in force premium at December 31 of between $1.203 billion and $1.208 billion. Gross earned premium of between $1.028 billion and $1.031 billion. Revenue between $661 million and $663 million. And adjusted EBITDA loss of between $140 million and $135 million. Stock-based compensation expense of approximately $60 million, and a weighted average share count of approximately 74 million shares. And with that, I would like to hand things back over to Daniel to answer some questions from our retail investors. Daniel?