Thanks, Dianna, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to report that we had another great quarter. We continue to benefit from favorable credit trends, prudent risk management strategies, a disciplined approach to the market and the talent and dedication of our team. We are focused and committed to creating long-term value for our stakeholders by executing our business strategies, and maintaining exceptional financial strength and flexibility. Turning our attention to our financial results. In the third quarter, we earned net income of $183 million and generated an annualized 15.1% return on equity. We wrote $14.6 billion in new insurance written and insurance in force, the main driver of our revenue stayed strong, ended the quarter at $294 billion. As expected, the mortgage origination and MI markets are smaller this year driven by higher mortgage rates, which has challenged affordability and led to fewer homes for sale due to the lock-in effect for borrowers with lower mortgage rates and significantly reduced refinance activity. For our business, those headwinds are somewhat offset by the tailwinds that higher interest rates have on the persistency of our insurance in force. Annual persistency has increased each of the last 10 quarters and ended the third quarter at 86.3%, up from 78.3% a year ago. The net result of lower volumes of new insurance and increased persistency is that our insurance in force has remained relatively flat during the year, consistent with what we expected at the start of the year. Credit performance on our in-force book continues to be a tailwind for our financial results and our delinquency inventory remains at historic lows. In addition, the new insurance we are writing continues to have strong credit characteristics. Home prices continue to be more resilient than expected despite affordability challenges and higher interest rates. However, the rate of home price growth has slowed in some areas, while others have seen modest declines. I remain optimistic that home prices generally will remain relatively stable, while there is noise in the market the housing market remains resilient. The supply of homes available for sale is still tight, however, there is pent-up demand and demographic trends suggest meaningful long-term MI opportunities. During the last few calls, I've discussed pricing actions we took in the third and fourth quarters of last year to address our views of risks and uncertainties in environment where interest rates have spiked, affordability was stretched and home prices were expected to fall from their peak. I also discussed our views of the market's risk return began to gradually improve during the year and then we expected our market position to also improve gradually during this year, even though our pricing was still meaningfully higher than the pricing we had in the market during the second quarter of last year. As a reminder, the timing between taking action and the resulting NIW is not immediate as pricing leads NIW by a month or two. So what you see in our third quarter NIW is primarily a reflection of our views of risk return from late second quarter of this year. As I mentioned on the last call, we believe there's additional improvement in our market position and believe that is reflected in our third quarter NIW. During the quarter and through October, we were very active in our capital management actions. In the third quarter, our share price reached a level where we could redeem our 9% junior convertible debentures, and we elected to do so. We settle all the debentures with cash and on September 20, they were fully retired which also eliminated 1.6 million potentially dilutive shares. While there was only $21 million of the debentures left at the time of the election to redeem, the full retirement removed the last vestiges of the financial crisis era financing that remained on our balance sheet. Nathan will provide additional details, but we're also very active with our reinsurance program during the quarter and continue our capital return program through both shareholder dividends and share repurchases. In the quarter, we repurchased 3.9 million shares of common stock for $67 million and paid a quarterly $0.115 per share common stock dividend for $33 million. In addition, through October 27, we repurchased an additional 2.2 million shares of common stock for a total of $37 million and the board authorized $0.115 per share common stock dividend to be paid November 28. Consistent with last quarter, our recent share repurchase activity reflects continued strong mortgage credit performance and financial results and share price valuation levels that we believe are very attractive to generate long-term value for remaining shareholders. Earlier this week, MGIC paid a $300 million dividend to the holding company, reflective of the strong capital position on MGIC and capital levels that continue to be above our target. The dividend from MGIC to the holding company enhances the liquidity position and the financial flexibility of the holding company. With our debt-to-capital ratio and our target range as the debenture is being fully retired, we have completed our plan delevering activities. With a strong credit performance and financial results we are experiencing, combined with a smaller origination market, which sold growth of our insurance in quarters, and the related required capital, at the current valuation levels, we expect our capital return payout will increase from the level in recent quarters, and you can begin to see that in our October repurchase activity. With that, let me turn it over to Nathan.