Thanks, Teri. Great to have you here. And good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to be with you today to recap our 2023 first quarter insurance engine results. We are off to a nice start to the year with total revenues within the insurance engines that are passing $2 billion for the quarter, generating pretax operating income of $152 million and increasing float while we invested in increasingly attractive yields. Let me now share a few thoughts on our first quarter results from across our collection of insurance businesses, which include our insurance and reinsurance underwriting operations, State National Program Services operations and the fill insurance linked securities operations. Looking first at our insurance segment. For decades, we've said we will walk away from business that is not adequately priced and does not meet our profitability targets. The first quarter of this year is a good example of us displaying rate adequacy discipline. Top line gross written premium growth within our insurance segment came in at 8%. That being said, we actually grew nicely in a number of product areas where we have a high degree of confidence around margins. We took advantage of improved pricing environment in property and grew in areas such as inland marine, binding, personal lines and select London market Marine and Energy classes. However, we are not comfortable with the pricing trend in the professional liability space, particularly in much of the large account D&O space. As a result, we are shrinking, selectively allowing some business to lapse and being very discerning around new accounts. Another example is in excess casualty lines where we saw some contraction as the pace of new business slows a bit and we are pushing hard for rate and are willing to let existing business laps where we are able to get it. We are doing what we said we will do. Another highlight for this quarter is that we continue to see benefits from our actions taken to minimize volatility in our underwriting results through actively managing our net expenditures to natural catastrophes. We experienced minimal losses in the quarter from winter or confective storm events. Within our insurance operations, we produced a combined ratio of 94, up 7 points from a year ago due to higher attritional loss ratio and prior accident year's loss ratio, which admittedly is above our target. However, we are confident about the strength of our current portfolio, while also displaying caution as we acknowledge the current level of uncertainty around insurance market conditions at the moment. Another area where we remain consistent and do as we say is with regards to our loss reserving philosophy. We continue to take a cautious view on loss reserving given the continued uncertainty in the market around loss trends and impacts from various forms of inflation, in particular within our longer tail professional and general liability lines. Over the past few quarters, we've raised our attritional loss ratios in many of our general liability and professional liability subclasses as these trends have become more apparent, leading to a year-over-year increase in the attritional loss ratio within our insurance operations. We also increased our current year loss ratio within our professional liability lines this quarter due to exposures arising from the recent bank failures. We also are maintaining a cautious approach relative to prior accident year loss takedowns. Prior year favorable development is lower year-over-year as we saw minimal development across our general liability and professional liability product lines compared to more favorable development a year ago. We continue to be quick to strengthen reserves in the pre-COVID soft market accident years when we see or anticipate increased claims activity. Encouragingly, we are seeing favorable actual versus expected trends in the more recent accident years. Given our conservative reserving approach, we are generally holding off on releasing reserves and allowing more time to gain greater certainty over the longer term loss trends. Turning next to our reinsurance segment. I am pleased to report that we continue to show profitability improvement with a 91 combined ratio for the quarter compared to a 95 a year ago. Our reunderwriting actions within the portfolio over the past few years continue to show up in the reinsurance results. The 4% decrease in gross written premiums within the Reinsurance segment was due to lower premiums in our professional liability and credit and surety lines, partially offset by higher premiums in our general liability and Marine and Energy lines. All of these movements are largely attributed to either premium adjustment activity or timing differences related to renewals. This is most notable in our transaction liability book within our profession liability product line where deal flows dropped considerably over the past few quarters, resulting in lower ultimate premium volumes. Lower premium adjustment activity creates an increase in our current year attritional loss ratio, which is offset by a decrease in our prior accident year's loss ratio. Next, I'll touch on our program services and other fronting operations and ILS operations, both of which are reported as part of our other operations. Our Nephila ILS and State National program services teams continue to remain focused on capturing market opportunities, building their value proposition to clients and partnering with our underwriting divisions to take advantage of synergies available within our multifaceted insurance platform. As a reminder, almost all of our gross written premium from our program services and other fronting operations is ceded. Total premium production within our program services and other fronting operations totaled $778 million this year versus $879 million a year ago. Premium decrease was due to a termination of certain programs, which was expected. Terminations will occur in part because periodically a partner obtains a rating agency increase of regulator, licensing approval or is acquired and moves away from needing a fronting model. The good news is that we continue to see a strong pipeline of opportunities in the current market and our ability to handle more complex transactions in this space differentiates us from competitors. Within the Nephila ILS operations, revenues and expenses for the year were down due to the impact of selling our Velocity and Volante MGA operations last year, as well as from the impact of lower assets under management, which stands at $7.2 billion at the end of the period. As a reminder, we realized a gain of $107 million in the first quarter last year related to the sale of a majority stake in our Velocity MGA operations. While our current results in Nephila reflect lower levels of AUM being experienced, we continue to work hard to raise capital across all three of our strategies, property catastrophe, climate and specialty loans. Current pricing environment and property when combined with our initiatives around transparency of risk assessment and portfolio construction leads us to conclude that the risk return proposition is as compelling as it has ever been. Turning to market commentary and outlook. Submission activity and new business opportunities generally remained strong in the first quarter outside of professional lines. Clients are still turning to specialty market solutions given current levels of uncertainty and ongoing economic activity. Our diverse product and risk management capabilities, our specialty underwriting expertise and strong reputation in the marketplace are particularly compelling in more uncertain times like these. Just a couple of comments on rate. Across our portfolio, rates are holding up fairly well and broadly in our estimation are keeping up with our view of trend. We have many products where rates are up 5% to 10%, particularly most lines where rate adequacy is more in focus. The biggest exceptions are property to the good with rates accelerating more meaningfully from the start of the year and risk managed large account D&O to the bad, where prices continue to decrease. Rate increases in large account excess casualty have also continued to slow, which concerns us. I want to reiterate that we are focused on achieving rate adequacy across the entirety of our portfolio and where we are unable to attain sufficient rate increases or effectively adjust terms and conditions or limits, we are walking away from accounts that do not meet our profitability targets. These actions may have the effect of slowing the growth trend from what we've seen over the past couple of years. And given the breadth of product offering we have, we are confident we will fund pockets that are attractive to grow, and we remain very optimistic around our mid and longer term profitable growth objectives. Thank you. And with that, I will turn things back over to Tom.