Thank you, Karim, and good morning to all. I plan to start on page four of the presentation where I will briefly summarize the consolidated financial results for the third quarter of 2024. Consolidated revenue in the third quarter was down 26%, driven by HDMC revenue down 32%, and partially offset by HDFS revenue growth of 10%. Consolidated operating income in the third quarter was $106 million, down 49% from the prior year period, driven by a decrease of $120 million at HDMC. At HDFS, operating income was up $17 million while the operating loss of the LiveWire segment was up by $1 million compared to a year ago. The consolidated operating margin in the third quarter was 9.2%, which compares to 13.5% in the prior year period where HDMC operating income margin was down 720 basis points year over year, and HDFS operating margin was improved by 410 basis points. I plan to go into further detail on each business segment's profit and loss drivers in the next section. Third quarter earnings per share was $0.91, which is down 34% from $1.38 last year. As we flip the page to our year-to-day results, total consolidated HDI revenue of $4.5 billion was down 6% compared to last year. The components of this were, at HDMC, revenue decreased by 9%. At HDFS, revenue increased by 11%, and at LiveWire, revenue declined by 30%. Total consolidated HDI operating income was $610 million, which was $190 million lower than the prior year. The components of this were, at HDMC, operating income of $491 million was 30% lower than prior year, reflecting an operating margin of 13.3% in the year-to-day period. At HDFS, operating income of $202 million increased by 14% in the year-to-day period. And at LiveWire, an operating loss of $83 million was in line with our expectations. Year-to-date earnings per share was $4.27, down 8% and compares to $4.65 in the same period in 2023. As Jochen said in his introductory comments, in Q3, the global consumer has seemingly taken a pause from big-ticket consumer discretionary spend based on different dynamics in each region. As Jochen mentioned, dealer inventory at the end of Q3 is down by 13% relative to the end of Q2 of this year, as we focus on reducing inventory levels in the second-half of 2024, both domestically and internationally. We are prioritizing support for our dealers in their attempts to reduce their inventory for the remainder of 2024. We expect dealer inventory to be down around 20% from the end of Q3 2024 levels, so that dealers will come into 2025 with inventory at similar levels to the start of 2024. We look forward to a healthier 2025 environment where, as Jochen mentioned earlier, we are focused on improving profitability throughout the Harley-Davidson dealer network and partnering more heavily with our dealers to develop and grow our grassroots marketing activations. We continue to prioritize availability and inventory of Touring, Trike, Softail, and CVO motorcycles. We will talk further about our expectations for both retail and wholesale motorcycles for the balance of 2024 in just a few minutes. Looking at revenue, HDMC revenue decreased by 32% in Q3, this was largely a result of the 39% decrease in wholesale units shipped in Q3, where we shipped 27,500 motorcycles in Q3 of '24, versus shipping 45,300 motorcycles in Q3 of '23. Focusing on the key drivers for the quarter from a revenue contribution standpoint, 32 points of decline was as a result of decreased wholesale volume at HDMC, where motorcycle down 39% in the quarter were meaningfully lower than retail sales of motorcycles. One point of growth came from pricing, which includes the net impact of pricing actions on 2024 model year motorcycles and overall sales incentives. One point of decline came from mix, as we compare to the prior year introduction of all new CVO motorcycles, focus more on touring shipments in the first-half of the year, and we round out the rest of the motorcycle portfolio shipments in the second-half of the year. And finally, foreign exchange was largely flat in the third quarter. In Q3, HDMC gross margin was 30.1%, which compares to 31.7% in the prior year. The decrease of 160 basis points was driven by the negative impacts from lower volumes and negative operating leverage. There were some positives in the quarter, including favorable net pricing, favorable foreign exchange, including hedging, and lower raw material and supply chain management costs as we begin to accelerate our manufacturing and supply chain savings, which helped offset the 2% rate of inflation seen during the quarters. On the operating expense side, expenses were $27 million lower relative to prior year, or 11%, as we continue to maintain overall cost discipline and increase our efforts to manage OpEx productivity at HDMC. HDMC operating income was $55 million, which was $120 million lower than prior year due to the significant reduction in wholesales. HDMC operating margin came in at 6.3% in Q3, from 13.5% in the prior year. For the year-to-date period, HDMC growth margin was 31.3%, which compares to 34.2% in the prior The decrease of 290 basis points was driven by the negative impacts from lower volumes, negative operating leverage, moderate inflation, and less favorable net pricing, which includes overall sales incentives. These impacts were partially offset by the positive impacts from favorable motorcycle mix and lower raw material costs and lower supply chain and manufacturing expenses, which I will discuss more deeply in comments regarding productivity. Lastly, in the first nine months, operating expenses were lower by $13 million, or 2%, as we maintained overall cost discipline due to actions that we began to take in the late Q2 of this year. HDMC operating income was $491 million, which was $214 million lower than prior year. HDMC operating margin was 13.3% through the first nine months, compared to 17.4% in the prior year period. Before we turn to the next slide, as I did in July, let me give a brief update on our productivity cost program. One of the initiatives identified as part of the Hardwire strategy, we are expecting to drive a $400 million improvement in productivity. As a reminder, we are now excluding the impact of leverage by holding our previously communicated multi-year target of $400 million. Excluding the impact of leverage, we delivered approximately $24 million in 2022 and $123 million in 2023. In 2024, we have delivered $84 million through Q3 of this year. Turning to slide 10 now, and the Financial Services segment, at Harley-Davidson Financial Services, Q3 revenue increased by $26 million, or 10%, driven by higher retail and commercial finance receivables, as well as higher average yields as the portfolio continues to reset over time with changes in Fed-based interest rates, which is currently driving higher interest income. HDFS operating income was $77 million, up $17 million, or up 29% compared to last year. The Q3 increase was driven by higher interest income and lower provision for credit losses, which were partially offset by increased borrowing costs, while operating expenses were largely flat. Total interest expense was up $10 million, or up 12% versus the prior year. The increase was driven by a higher cost of funds as lower interest rate debt matured and was replaced with current market rate debt. In Q3, HDFS's annualized retail credit loss ratio was 3.1%, which compares to an annualized retail credit loss ratio of 2.7% in Q3 of 2023. The increase in credit losses was driven by several factors relating to the current macroeconomic environment and the related customer and industry dynamics. In addition, the retail allowance for credit losses for the third quarter came in at 5.5%, virtually flat compared to 5.4% at both prior year-end and Q2 of 2024. This reflects our best estimate of the current and future retail lending environment. Total retail loan originations in Q3 were down 11%, while commercial financing activities were up 18% to $1.2 billion. Total quarter-end net financing receivables, including both retail loans and commercial financing, was $7.8 billion, which was up 2% versus prior year. Turning to slide 11 and to year-to-date results at HDFS, revenue increased by $74 million or 11%, HDFS operating income was $202 million, up $25 million or up 14% compared to last year. The year-to-date increase was driven by higher interest income, which more than offset higher borrowing costs, higher provision for credit losses, and higher operating expenses. For the LiveWire segment, electric motorcycles revenue increased in the third quarter of 2024 compared to the prior year period due to higher unit sales of EV motorcycles in the quarter. At STACYC, the electric balance bike business, revenue was down compared to the prior year, which we expected due to a reduction in third-party branded distributor volumes. Selling administrative and engineering expenses were down $2 million, or down 6% in Q3 compared to prior year. LiveWire operating loss of $26 million, $1 million more than a year ago was in line with our expectations as LiveWire continued to invest in new motorcycle models and also actioned initiatives to reduce the overall cost of sales for EV motorcycles. For the year-to-date results of the LiveWire segment, revenue was $16 million, down 30% from the prior year, as a result of lower revenue at STACYC. For the year-to-date period, LiveWire sold 374 electric motorcycles, which is a triple-digit increase over the prior year period. For the period, LiveWire operating loss was $83 million, which was in line with our expectations. Wrapping up with consolidated Harley-Davidson Inc. financial results, we delivered $931 million of operating cash flow in the first nine months of 2024, which was up from $707 million in the same period last year. The increase in operating cash flow was influenced by positive changes in working capital as we focus on tight inventory management, as well as a change in wholesale finance receivables. Total cash and cash equivalents ended at $2.2 billion, which was $366 million higher than at the end of Q3 prior year. This consolidated cash number includes $88 million at LiveWire. Additionally, as part of our capital allocation strategy and in line with our commitment to return capital to our shareholders, in Q3, we bought back four million shares of our stock at a cost of $150 million. This brings our total amount of shares bought back in the nine months of 2024 to 9.5 million shares of Harley-Davidson common stock at a total value of $350 million, which is 7% of shares outstanding at the beginning of 2024. This compares to 6.1 million shares at a cost of $226 million in the first nine months of 2023. Given the lower-than-expected retail demand we experienced in the first nine months of the year, which we expect to continue into Q4, we are revising our full-year 2024 outlook. At HDMC, we continue to expect that retail units sold and wholesale unit shipments will be broadly balanced by the end of 2024. And we now expect retail and wholesale to be in the range of 149,000 to 153,000 units, which is a change from 163,000 to 168,000 at Q2 earnings. We expect retail to be in the range of down 6% to 8% for the full-year, which is a change from flat-to-up 3% for the full-year. And we expect wholesale shipments to be in the range of down 16% to 17% for the full-year, which is a change from down 7% to 10% for the full-year. These lower revised top line inputs result in a change to our full-year HDMC revenue and HDMC operating income targets. We now expect revenue to be down in the range of 14% to 16% for the full-year, which is a change from down 5% to 9% for the full-year at Q2 earnings. We now expect operating income margin to come in-between 7.5% and 8.5% for the full-year, which is a change from 10.6% to 11.6% range for the full-year that we had previously guided to. The downward revision is due to production and wholesale reductions and the resulting impact of leverage. We believe these reductions position the company more appropriately for 2025. At HDFS, guidance for the full-year of 2024 is revised upward, where we now expect operating income to be up 5% to 10% for the full-year, which is a change from flat-to-up 5% for the full-year at Q2 earnings. At LiveWire, the guidance for full-year 2024 is revised. We now expect to deliver between 600 and 1,000 electric motorcycle units, while operating loss in the range of $105 million to $115 million is unchanged. And we continue to expect capital investment in the range of $225 million to $250 million, which is unchanged. As a reminder, our capital allocation priorities remain to fund the profitable growth of the Hardwire initiatives, which includes the capital expenditures, paying dividends, and continuing to execute discretionary share repurchases as outlined in the previous quarter. We feel this highlights our operating discipline overall cash flow generation, and the long-term earnings power, and is supported by our continued commitment to deliver a 15% HDMC operating income margin by the end of 2025. And with that, we will open it up to Q&A.