Thanks, John. My comments today will focus on capital allocation, our financial position and liquidity, and our unaudited second quarter results. At September 30, 2023, we reported $192 million of free cash, which was a significant increase from the $155.5 million reported at the end of June. As of November 1, we had unrestricted cash balance of $171.7 million, which is net of the $40.3 million dividend payment made today. With a debt balance at quarter end of $637.1 million, our debt to total book capitalization stood at 40.8% and our net debt to total book capitalization at 28.5% with well-structured and attractively priced debt capital, an undrawn revolver, and one debt-free vessel coupled with our strong free cash balance, we enjoy a comfortable measure of financial flexibility. We currently expect our cash cost per day for the coming year to be approximately $25,000 per day, excluding capital expenditures for dry docking and scrubbers. For the discussion of our second quarter results, you may also find it useful to refer to the investor highlight slides posted this morning on our website. I would also note that my remarks today will include a number of terms such as TCE, operating days, available days, and adjusted EBITDA. Please refer to our filings for the definitions of these terms. For our second quarter chartering results, we achieved a TCE of $65,128 per operating day with a total utilization of 96.5% yielding utilization adjusted TCE of about $62,818. This TCE result represents the second best in the company's history. Since we only have two vessels trading outside the Helios Pool, both of which are on time charter, the spot results that Helios reports are the best measure of our spot chartering performance. For the September 30 quarter, the Helios Pool earned TC of $78,643 for its spot in COA voyages, which is the highest spot rate the pool has ever earned for a quarter. Well, we've always provided information on the number and length of our time charters and our filings. For convenience, we have replicated that information on Page 4 of our investor highlights materials. Based on that information, you can see that we have eight Dorian vessels on time charter within the pool, indicating a spot exposure of about 70% for the 27 vessels in the Helios Pool. Turning to the quarter ending December 31, 2023 i.e. the current quarter. We are pleased to report that we have 69% of the available days in the Helios Pool booked at a time charter equivalent in excess of $85,000 per day, which obviously reflects a very strong freight market. Please note that the 85,000 includes both spot fixtures and time charters. OpEx per calendar day for the quarter, excluding dry docking related costs was $10,399, which was up somewhat sequentially. Sequentially, crew costs were down while lubricants and spare stores were increased modestly. Our time charter-in expense for the five time charter-in vessels came in at $12.1 million consistent with our guidance last quarter. That number reflects three vessels for the whole quarter, one TC-in vessel that was re-delivered at the end of August and the crystal ball, which delivered July 10, 2023. Total G&A for the quarter was about $13.6 million and cash G&A. That's G&A excluding non-cash comp expense was about $9.4 million. Within that amount was $3.4 million of cash bonuses paid during the quarter. Therefore, our core G&A came in at roughly $6 million, which is consistent with our expectations. Non-cash compensation expense was higher this quarter because U.S. GAAP requires us to book all service-based grants at the prevailing stock price on grant date. Thus, while the number of shares granted was flat versus the prior year, the price was virtually double, which explains the increased expense. Going forward, we expect non-cash comp expense to be around $1.4 million per quarter. A reported adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $104.6 million, which is the best quarterly adjusted EBITDA in our corporate history. Our adjusted EBITDA for the last 12 months is over $350 million, nearly $360 million Turning to debt service. Our cash interest expense, which we calculate as the sum of the line items, interest expense excluding deferred financing fees and other loan expenses and realize gain loss on interest rate swap derivatives for the quarter was $7.7 million, a decline of about $200,000 from the prior quarter reflecting lower average debt and our all-in debt cost of about 4.7%, which we note is below the current floating SOFR rates. Quarterly principal amortization remains steady at $13.3 million. Our trailing 12-month income is approximately $256 million and with a book shareholder's equity at September 30, 2023 of roughly $923 million, we generated a 27.7% return on shareholders' equity. We are proud of this result because it not only reflects the strong profitability that our platform is capable of generating, it also shows that we've managed to keep our shareholders' equity in an appropriate level, balancing retention of necessary earnings with paying out meaningful dividends to our shareholders. Although we currently hold a roughly 86% economic interest in Helios, we do not consolidate its P&L or balance sheet accounts, which has the effect of understating our cash and working capital somewhat. Thus, to provide some additional insight, we note that, Wednesday, November 1, 2023, the pool held roughly $38 million of cash. The $1 per share dividend declared in early October and paid today brings our total dividends paid to $10.50 per share, or nearly $425 million in the aggregate. We underscore again that these dividends are irregular dividends reflecting the irregular nature of VLGC rates. Together with our open market stock repurchases and our $113.5 million self-tender offer, we have returned over $650 million to our shareholders since our IPO. Our Board remains committed to enhancing total shareholder returns and as John has mentioned on numerous occasion, also recognize the importance of retaining capital to renew and expand the fleet as market opportunities present themselves. These goals are balanced against the market outlook, the operating and capital needs of the business, and an appropriate level of risk tolerance given the volatility in shipping. With strong LPG trade fundamentals, we remain cautiously optimistic about our cash flow generation over the coming months. With that, I'll pass it over to Tim Hansen.