Thank you, Hal. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for MFA Financial's second quarter 2024 earnings call. With me today are Mike Roper, our CFO; Gudmundur Kristjansson and Bryan Wulfsohn, our Co-Chief Investment Officers and other members of our senior management team. I'll begin with a high level review of the second quarter market environment and touch on some of our results, activities and opportunities. Then I'll turn the call over to Mike to review our financials in more detail, followed by Bryan and Gudmundur, who will review our portfolio, financing and risk management before we open up the call to questions. The second quarter of 2024 was another pretty volatile period, with two-year treasuries drifting 40 basis points wider and ending April a little over 5% before rallying back to 475 at the end of the quarter. Similarly, 10-year treasuries sold off 50 basis points to 470 before rallying back to end the quarter at 440. Despite the volatile rate environment, MFA posted a solid second quarter with distributable earnings of $0.44 and respectable total economic return of 2.6%, driven by significant credit spread tightening during the quarter. During the quarter, we took advantage of this spread tightening and were able to opportunistically sell certain loans at prices well above our marks. Our GAAP and economic book values were flat for the quarter. In April, we completed a second senior unsecured bond offering of $75 million with a coupon rate of 9%, and in June, we paid off the remaining balance of $170 million of our convertible senior notes. In late May, we called an NPL securitization, which generated almost $80 million of liquidity. As we have discussed over the last several quarters, this optionality in the form of our callable securitizations provides us with an often underappreciated capability to optimize our liability framework in the quarters and years ahead and unlock significant capital that we can redeploy at attractive ROEs. We currently have about $1.2 billion UPB of callable securitizations outstanding. We continued to execute on our securitization strategy in the second quarter with a $365 million Non-QM deal in April and a $192 million revolving RTL securitization in May. Subsequent to quarter-end in July, we issued a $303 million rated RPL securitization, collateralized in part by loans from the aforementioned NPL deal that we called in May. During the quarter, overall delinquencies in our residential loan portfolio fell to 6.5% from 6.9% at the end of Q1. However, we did see delinquencies tick up in our multifamily transitional loan book. Like others in the industry, we've been watching this multifamily sector with a growing sense of unease over the last several quarters. Although, rents have held steady in most markets, we have seen moderation from the rapid pace of rent appreciation experienced over the last several years. Additionally, the combination of higher cap rates and increased supply has hurt multifamily property values in many markets. Even for performing transitional loans. The higher rate environment produces challenges for refinancing these bridge loans as they approach maturity. In our portfolio, the delinquency rate rose to 4.6% from approximately 3% at the end of Q1. In response to our concerns about difficulties in multifamily lending generally, we made the decision during the quarter to temporarily refocus our resources away from multifamily lending at Lima One. This decision comes after three straight quarters of significant declines in Lima's multifamily origination volumes, and it allows us to concentrate our efforts on what we believe is a more compelling opportunity set in single-family transitional and rental lending. Transitioning to Lima One more broadly, July 1 marked the three-year anniversary of our acquisition of Lima One Capital and in that time, we have originated over $6 billion of high yielding loans for our balance sheet and issued over $3 billion of securitizations backed by Lima One collateral. Despite the current headwinds we are seeing in the multifamily space, we are excited about the opportunity going forward in both residential transitional and single-family rental lending with two largest components of Lima's origination volume. As we enter the fourth year of our ownership of Lima One, we are also excited to announce the appointment of Josh Woodward as CEO of Lima One. Josh's appointment follows the retirement of Lima One CEO, Jeff Tennyson after six years at the helm. We are grateful for his dedication and the contributions Jeff made during his tenure at Lima One. His leadership was instrumental in transforming Lima into an industry-leading, fully integrated business purpose lending platform. I also look forward to introducing our investors to Josh. Josh has been with Lima One for over 10 years and during that time has overseen Lima's accounting, finance, servicing, treasury and capital markets teams. The month of July was very constructive for both rates and spreads and culminated with Chair Powell's press conference last week, which opened the door for a rate cut at the Fed's September meeting. This was followed by last Friday's payroll report, which had a seismic impact on both equity and rates markets. Two-year treasury yields are now 70 basis points lower than at the end of the second quarter. Two's, 10's while slightly inverted have converged significantly less than 10 basis points this morning and we will likely see a return to a normal yield curve fairly soon into a Fed easing cycle. The yield curve has been inverted for two long years now, so a normal yield curve is going to feel like an exit from a long, dark tunnel. Finally, securitization spreads have been stable with the most recent Non-QM deals pricing AAAs in the 130s or low 5% yields. These are all significant tailwinds for our business and our ability to generate income, and we're excited and energized about the second half of 2024. And I will now turn the call over to Mike Roper to discuss our financial results.