Thanks, Doug, and good morning, everyone. I will start by summarizing our quarterly results as our strong performance this quarter supports our confidence in our unchanged full-year outlook. Our results are highlighted by receivable growth from increasing high-quality originations, robust growth in total revenue, ongoing disciplined expense management, and steady improvement in credit performance. Together, these led to improving returns on a larger portfolio and therefore, growth in capital generation and capital generation return on receivables. We also further strengthened our balance sheet, raising $1.5 billion in both the secured and unsecured markets, demonstrating our leading market access and funding execution. First quarter GAAP net income was $213 million or $1.78 per diluted share, up 38% from $1.29 per diluted share in the first quarter of 2024. C&I adjusted net income was $1.72 per diluted share, up 19% from $1.45 in the first quarter of 2024. Capital generation, the metric against which we manage and measure our business, totaled $194 million, up 25% or $39 million from $155 million in the first quarter of 2024, reflecting growth in our loan portfolio and notable improvement in our credit performance. We have returned to year-over-year growth in capital as we have successfully navigated through what has been and continues to be a challenging post-COVID inflationary environment affecting our customers. Further proof that our responsive, customer-focused operating model and advanced analytics give us a significant advantage to manage through any economic scenario. Managed receivables ended the quarter at $24.6 billion, up $2.6 billion or 12% from a year ago. First quarter originations were $3 billion, up 20% year over year. Excluding the acquisition of Foresight, our auto finance business focused on franchise dealerships, our organic originations growth was 13%, demonstrating our ability to find profitable pockets of growth in higher quality origination segments of the near-prime market. I want to point out that as of April 1 of this year, we are a year post-acquisition of Foresight, so we expect total origination growth will moderate closer to our year-over-year organic growth percentage going forward. If strong origination growth has been supported by consumer loan origination APRs, that have remained steady and healthy at 26.8%. First quarter consumer loan yields were 22.4%, up 20 basis points from the fourth quarter and up 28 basis points year over year. Consumer loan yields are benefiting from the pricing we have taken since mid-2023, which have more than offset the impact of growing our lower yield, lower loss auto finance portfolio. Given the constructive competitive environment, we were able to sustain the improved pricing. Looking ahead, we expect modest improvement to yield. How exactly yield will trend is dependent on several factors, including pricing, which will be influenced by the competitive landscape, our 90-plus delinquency performance, and the mix of our portfolio between our personal loans and our auto finance product. Total revenue was $1.5 billion, up 10% compared to the first quarter of 2024. Interest income of $1.3 billion grew 11% year over year, driven by receivables growth and the yield improvement I just mentioned. Other revenue of $191 million grew 6% compared to the first quarter of 2024, primarily driven by higher gain on sale and servicing income associated with the expanded whole loan sale agreement I discussed on our last earnings call. Interest expense for the quarter was $311 million, up $35 million compared to the first quarter of 2024, driven by the increase in average debt to support our receivables growth and modestly higher cost of funds compared to a year ago. On the latter point, interest expense as a percentage of average net receivables in the quarter was 5.4%. This is in line with our expectations for the full year. As you know, our balance sheet strategy to issue fixed-rate, longer-dated securities minimizes the impact from market fluctuations in any given year. We expect this metric to remain steady through 2025. First quarter provision expense was $450 million, comprising net charge-offs of $473 million and a $17 million decrease to our reserves driven by the typical seasonal decline in receivables during the first quarter. As our loan loss ratio remained flat quarter over quarter. I will discuss losses in more detail momentarily. Policyholder benefits and claims expense for the quarter was $49 million, essentially flat to prior year. And we continue to expect quarterly PBMC expense in the low $50 million range over the remainder of 2025. Let's turn to slide eight. Look at consumer loan delinquency trends. 30-plus delinquency at March 31, excluding Foresight, was 5.08%, down 49 basis points compared to a year ago, benefiting from improvements in both early and late-stage delinquencies. The seasonal quarter-over-quarter trend improvement of 57 basis points is also better than pre-pandemic patterns. Our thirty to eighty-nine day delinquency was 2.63%, down nine basis points year over year, continuing the downward momentum we saw a quarter ago. We are pleased with our improving credit metrics and anticipate these positive delinquency trends will continue to enhance our loss performance in the upcoming quarters. On Slide nine, you see our front book vintages, comprised of consumer loans originated after our August 2022 credit tightening, now make up 87% of total receivables. The performance of the front book remains in line with expectations and will result in improved credit trends in our portfolio going forward. While the back book continues to diminish, now only accounting for 13% of the total portfolio, it still represents more than a quarter of our 30-plus delinquency. We anticipate that the back book will continue to run down over the remainder of this year with negligible contribution by year-end. Let us now turn to charge-offs and reserves as shown on slide 10. C&I net charge-offs, which include credit cards, were 8.2% of average net receivables in the first quarter, down 49 basis points from a year ago. This marks the first quarter since 2021 where C&I losses improved as compared to prior year. Following the trends we saw in early delinquency in the second half of 2024. This gives us confidence in the trajectory of losses for the year and aligns with our expectation for notable improvement in net charge-offs in 2025 compared to 2024. Consumer loan net charge-offs, which exclude credit card, were 7.8% in the quarter, down 75 basis points year over year. We commented a year ago that we expected consumer loan peak losses in the first half of 2024. And we are seeing losses trend down as anticipated. Recoveries remained strong in the quarter at $88 million or 1.5% of receivables. Recoveries in the quarter included approximately $12 million of bulk sales of charged-off loans, a similar level to the first quarter of 2024. We continue to opportunistically utilize the many strategies we have available to optimize recovery. Loan loss reserves ended the quarter at $2.7 billion. While the credit performance of our portfolio is improving, as you can see in our charge-off and delinquency metrics, our reserve coverage stayed essentially flat during the quarter as we maintained our conservative macroeconomic overlay in our reserve formula. Keep in mind that our loan loss reserves include our credit card portfolio, which has higher loss that are more than offset by the greater than 30% revenue yield that the credit card product generates. The credit card portfolio naturally carries a higher reserve ratio, and although it is still a small portion of the total portfolio, it currently contributes about 30 basis points to the overall reserve ratio. We feel very good about our reserve levels, but recognize that the economy is evolving. And we will be prepared to adjust reserves if needed, going forward. Now let's turn to slide 11. Operating expenses were $401 million, down 5% from the fourth quarter and up 11% compared to a year ago. For context, on the year-over-year comparison, the first quarter of 2024 did not include Foresight expenses and was also lowered given expense reduction actions in the quarter. We feel great about the operating leverage in the business, and our expense ratio of 6.6% this quarter was down from 6.8% last quarter and in line with our expectation for full-year 2025 as we drive operating efficiency while also investing for future profitable growth. Now let us turn to funding and our balance sheet. On slide 12. During the quarter, we raised a total of $1.5 billion through two issuances. In January, we issued a five-year revolving $900 million auto ABS issuance with an average cost of funds just under five and a half percent. In March, as the markets began to get more volatile, we issued a $600 million unsecured bond at 6.5%. The seven-year tenor of this bond provides rate flexibility with a three-year call feature and extends our maturity profile into 2032. During the quarter, we increased our secured bank lines further strengthening our liquidity profile. Our bank facilities totaled $7.5 billion at quarter-end, with unencumbered receivables of $10.2 billion. We proactively raised $1.5 billion this quarter and have increased our liquidity profile. This, combined with our diversified funding sources, provides flexibility in our funding strategy over the remainder of the year. Our robust funding model with unparalleled market access and execution regardless of the environment, gives us a competitive edge. We are diligent in our focus on maintaining our fortress balance sheet and see it as a true advantage, especially in times of uncertainty. Net leverage at the end of the first quarter was 5.5 times, slightly below last quarter. Turning to Slide 14. We are maintaining our 2025 guidance that we provided to you last quarter. We had a strong first quarter and are confident in our ability to successfully manage through uncertain economic environments as we have demonstrated time and again. For full-year 2025, we expect to grow managed receivables by 5% to 8%, and total revenue by 6% to 8%. We expect C&I net charge-offs of 7.5% to 8%. And an operating expense ratio of approximately 6.6%. All of which we expect will drive improved capital generation as compared to 2024. To date, we are not seeing any weakness in the consumers we serve, but we are closely monitoring the markets for shifts that may impact our customers. We believe the resiliency of our business model and the experience of our teams allow us to manage comfortably within the ranges that we provided you in January. In summary, we feel great about the start of the year. Our book continues to perform well, and we believe we have solid momentum moving forward. This positions us well to deliver exceptional shareholder value in 2025 and throughout the years ahead. And with that, let me turn the call back over to Doug.