Thanks, Tim, and good morning. As Tim mentioned, we had another quarter with excellent financial results. We are net income and adjusted net operating income of $0.77 per diluted share compared to $0.64 per diluted share last year. A detailed reconciliation of GAAP net income to adjusted net operating income can be found in our earnings release. The strong credit performance we continue to experience again led into a negative loss ratio this quarter. Our re-estimation of ultimate losses on prior delinquencies resulted in $66 million of favorable loss reserve development in the quarter. The favorable development this quarter primarily came from delinquency notices we received in 2022 and 2023. Curates on those delinquency notices continue to exceed our expectations and therefore, we have made favorable adjustments to our ultimate loss expectations. In the third quarter, our account-based delinquency rate increased 15 basis points to 2.24%, which is consistent with the seasonal trends we discussed last quarter and below the pre-pandemic 2.78% delinquency rate seen at the end of the third quarter of 2019. We expect that the delinquency rate will increase modestly due to seasonality in the fourth quarter before considering any impact from hurricanes Helene and Milton. The in-force premium yield was 38.9 basis points in the quarter, compared to 38.4 basis points last quarter. The increase in the quarter was due in part to updating our method for estimating the current mortgage amount of our in-force loans, which resulted in lower insurance in force and a 0.2 basis point increase in our in-force premium yield for the quarter. We continue to expect the in-force premium yield will remain relatively flat for the year. The book yield on the investment portfolio was 3.8% at the end of the third quarter, up 40 basis points from a year ago and a marginal increase quarter-over-quarter as the yield on cash and cash equivalents declined, offsetting improvements from reinvestment. Net investment income was $62 million in the quarter, up $1 million sequentially and up $7 million from the third quarter last year. During the third quarter, the reinvestment rates in our fixed income portfolio continued to be above the book yield. We expect the book yield to continue to increase, but at a slower rate. Re-investment rates are facing downward pressure with the expectation of more rate cuts through the end of next year. In addition, the Fed's 50 basis point rate cut in September and significant declines in yields across the treasury curve caused fixed income prices to rise, resulting in the unrealized loss position on our investment portfolio, improving by $163 million in the quarter. The increase in investment income has continued to benefit total revenue, which was $307 million in the quarter compared to $305 million last quarter and $297 million in the third quarter last year. We remain focused on operational efficiency and expense management. Operating expenses in the quarter were $53 million, down from $55 million last quarter and flat with the third quarter last year. We expect the full year operating expenses will be in the range we provided throughout the year of $215 million to $225 million. Our operating results, together with our strong balance sheet, enabled us to grow book value per share to $20.66, up 19% compared to a year ago while returning $625 million of capital to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases and reducing outstanding shares by 8%. As Tim discussed, our well-established reinsurance program, which includes the use of forward commitment quota share agreements and excess of loss agreements executed in either the traditional or ILN market is a key component of our capital management strategy. These agreements reduce the volatility of losses and adverse macroeconomic environments and provide diversification and flexibility to our sources of capital. Our overall reinsurance strategy is to prioritize coverage on the most recent book year vintages and future NIW and to recapture risk on seasoned book year vintages if the reinsurance no longer offers enough tail risk protection in stress scenarios. Quota share reinsurance is the foundation of our program as we value the forward commitment and certainty of coverage and have been consistent quota share buyers for more than a decade. In October, we further bolstered our reinsurance program with a multiyear 40% quota share agreement with a panel of highly rated reinsurers that will cover most of our policies written in 2025 and 2026. We also elected to cancel the quota share treaties covering our 2021 NIW effective December 31, 2024, both of these actions are consistent with our reinsurance strategy and followed the same approach we have taken in recent years to managing our overall risk and capital positions. One further comment before turning it back over to Tim. At quarter end, MGIC's available assets exceeded PMIERs required assets by $2.5 billion. PMIER's excess level will fluctuate with the timing of dividend payments and reinsurance transactions, and we expect the $400 million dividend from MGIC to the holding company and the cancellation of the 2021 quota share will result in a decrease in our PMIERs excess level at year-end. And with that, let me turn it back over to Tim.