Thank you, Steve. I believe our Q1 results were a testament to our strategy, which includes our focus on the most affordable segments of the market, building specs and our streamline operations. We achieved our success this quarter by addressing the portion of the housing market buyers with the greatest need for homes as life events are necessitating a change in dwelling for them. Further, differentiating our product by offering homes that are move-in-ready, affordable, and have surprisingly more value via upgraded finishes and energy efficient components and automation suite allows to be an attractive alternative to available resale inventory. Slide 5. Given our team’s strong execution during the first quarter of 2023, our Q1 closing of 2,897 homes was 1% greater than prior year. Entry-level homes comprised 84% of closings compared to 86% in the prior year. Our sales orders of 3,487 homes this quarter were up 93% sequentially from the fourth quarter of 2022 while down 10% compared to last year’s challenging cost, which resulted from a 14% decline in average absorption pace from 4.9 to 4.2 net sales per month. That was partially offset by a 4% growth in average community count. Entry-level homes comprised 87% of orders compared to 83% in the prior year. The cancellation rate for the first quarter 2023 of 15% moderated sequentially from 39% in the fourth quarter of 2022 and was in line with our historical averages. We exceeded our target for store sales objectives of three to four per month in the first quarter of 2023 due to the available of move-in-ready homes, which is the most preferred type of inventory for first-time home buyers. And in combination of price cuts, mortgage rate locks and buy-downs and other incentives as customized to the customer expectations in each of our communities. We have seen a slight increase in our ASPs as is visible in our Q1 orders. The sequential quarterly ASP increase in orders is due to three factors. First, we started to pull back on incentive this quarter to the tune of about $8,000 to $10,000 per home. We also started to test our markets with small price increases in geographies where supply is particularly tight and prices are more elastic. In addition to mix slightly impacting our results as well. Our Q4 order ASP was also impacted by the higher ASP on cancellations that quarter from earlier 2022 sales, which also decreased our Q4 orders ASP as the number we report is a net ASP. Now moving to Slide 6, regional-level trends. Meritage is a builder with a balanced geographic footprint between East, Central and West regions. All of our regions achieve or exceeded our sales pace target in the first quarter of 2023. The highest regional absorption pace of 4.5 per month in the first quarter occurred in our West region. This market regained the most sales momentum as we were able to find the right market clearing price in late 2022. Arizona’s average absorption pace of 5.2 per month was the highest, yet its year-over-year decline in ASPs on orders was also the largest, reflecting the magnitude of the pricing reset in this market. The Central region, which is comprised of our Texas markets had an absorption pace of 4.4 per month in the first quarter of 2023. Most communities and greater availability of completed specs translated into sequential improvement in sales paid for Texas. We believe the pro business environment and in-migration trends in Texas will continue to positively impact home buyer demand in the future. The East region’s average absorption pace was 3.8 per month during the quarter. Economies remained resilient and demand was still strong in this region, but lower available supply of complete specs in Georgia and the Carolinas impacted our absorptions there as we work to ramp up production in our new communities. We’re now focused on maintaining three to four net sales per month for the remainder of the year. Turning to Slide 7. We managed our starts on a per community basis to align with our sales pace. We have the flexibility to increase or slow down start to keep our target of four months to six months applied spec on the ground. We started nearly 2,500 homes in the first quarter, accelerating from approximately 2,100 homes in the fourth quarter of 2022, but down from 4,000 in the first quarter of 2022. We ended the period with nearly 3,900 spec homes in inventory, which was down 21% sequentially from the artificially higher fourth quarter due to the high level of cancellations. This represented 13.9 specs per community, which was slightly lower run supply specs than our goal as we sold homes at a faster pace than anticipated during the quarter. We expect to continue to manage spec starts to align with increased demand we experienced in all of our markets. Of the 2,897 home closing this quarter, 87% came from previously started inventory, up from 80% in the prior year. 25% of total specs were completed at March 31, 2023, increasing from 16% at year end, which is closer to our normal runway rate of one-third, and what we believe is needed to capture today’s buyer. As 45% of the homes we closed this quarter were sold during the quarter, we improved our backlog conversion rate from 50% last year to 87% this quarter. And achieved our targeted backlog conversion rate of at least 80%. While we don’t expect to hit the 80% conversion rate consistently until supply chain and labor constraint issues are resolved, we do believe our operating model supports this conversion rate on a normalized basis. The high backlog conversion rate resulted in our ending backlog of approximately 3,900 homes. During the first quarter of 2023, our cycle times improved by approximately one week sequentially from Q4, primarily from front-end trades. But we’re still approximately six weeks longer than our pre-COVID averages. Backend trades and our suppliers generally have not caught up with the industry-level backlog. But we continue to lean on these long-term relationships and are starting to see a path to better cycle times in the back half of this year. Reducing cycle times is a company-wide initiative for us in 2023. And we’ll continue to provide quarterly updates on our progress. Even as we increased our community count 4% year-over-year and 3% sequentially from the fourth quarter to 278 as of March 31, 2023, our ending community count was lower than we expected. We opened 27 new communities this quarter, but the continued transformer issues across the country halted some new community opens. Further, our healthy sales over-pace led to early closeouts. We now anticipate returning to 300 communities by year end. I will now turn it over to Hilla to provide additional analysis of our financial results. Hilla?