Thanks, Andrew. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining the call today. Our focus remains on returning the company to financial health and profitability via rehabilitation of the portfolio yield, growth of our Small Business Lending operations, and management of our 2026 debt maturities. To begin, we continue to make progress in our balance sheet repositioning via reductions in our CRE loan exposure using sales of low-yielding assets in conjunction with our traditional asset management strategies. To that end, we completed 2 portfolio sales. The first discussed in the second quarter call was the sale of 21 loans with an unpaid principal balance of $665 million at a price of [ $78 ]. The transaction netted $85 million and provided incremental earnings of $0.02 per share in the quarter with $0.05 per share expected for the pro forma full quarter. The second, the sale of 196 small balance loans with high servicing costs with an unpaid principal balance of $93 million at a price of [ $97 ] netting $24 million. At quarter end, post completion of the sales, along with normal principal paydowns of $410 million, the portfolio totaled 1,120 loans with an unpaid principal balance of $5.4 billion and carrying value of $5.2 billion, split 94% in the core portfolio and 6% noncore portfolio. In the core portfolio, in the absence of adding new loans, we anticipate that the denominator effect will prevail as payoffs accelerate with portfolio seasoning and some loans migrate to delinquency, net of modifications. In the quarter, there were $40 million of new core net delinquencies, $131 million of core migrated to 60-day-plus, of which $91 million were resolved via modification or liquidation. As a result, delinquencies increased to 5.9% of the total. Levered yields in the portfolio increased 10 basis points to 11%. For core loans experiencing negative migration, our go-forward asset management strategy will favor liquidations. In the noncore portfolio, we liquidated $503 million in the quarter, leaving 31 loans marked to 79% of UPB. In the quarter, the noncore portfolio had an $8 million drag on earnings or $0.05 per share. We also have $648 million of REO across 28 positions, including the Portland mixed-use asset comprising 66% of the total. The remaining REO book of $218 million comprises 27 assets with a $3.7 million average value, creating greater liquidity on exit. In the quarter, we sold 5 properties valued at $50 million and added 4 REO totaling $54 million via foreclosure. Of note, collapsing the majority of our CRE CLOs has provided more flexible asset management, particularly quicker execution of foreclosure deed-in-lieu transactions to sell liquid multifamily properties. The Portland mixed-use asset represents 14% of quarter-end equity and is segmented into 3 components: the Ritz-branded hotel with 251 rooms; 169,000 square feet of office and retail space; and 132 Ritz residences. In the quarter, net operating loss on the hotel was $330,000, with occupancy of 48%, ADR of $504, and RevPAR of $240, both up sequentially and quarter-over-quarter. After 24 months of operation, the hotel continues to near stabilization. The office and retail are currently 28% leased and hit breakeven. As discussed last quarter, our new property manager, Lincoln Property, a global platform with expertise in hospitality, is executing our business plan. We have had 6 prospective office tenants tour the space since taking the keys and expect to make significant progress in lease-up over the next few quarters. Lastly, we have sold a total of 11 Ritz residences. We've engaged a top global firm in luxury condo sales and are launching a revised pricing strategy to improve future sales velocity. The net loss on the residences was $900,000. In total, the position is nearing breakeven on operations, with a net operating loss of $1.3 million, with an additional $3.7 million in interest carry. As previously stated, we will look to exit the position on the heels of ongoing stabilization, lease-up, and sales. In our Small Business Lending operations, despite pressure from the government shutdown, we continue to see growth opportunities. In the quarter, we originated $175 million of Small Business Administration 7(a) loans, 50% below our quarterly target. As discussed on prior calls, the primary hurdle to reaching target volumes has been access to the capital markets, which has been slow given SBA staff turnover earlier in the year. With that being said, the approval of our $75 million warehouse facility and 2 planned securitizations will open significant capacity for achieving volume growth in 2026. USDA production was $67 million in the quarter. Combined, the Small Business Lending platform generated $11 million in net income, adding 280 basis points return on equity before realized losses to the company's total. This platform continues to be a strong counterbalance to our CRE business with nearly $400 million invested and represents significant tangible equity value. Turning to our balance sheet. In 2026, we have $650 million of debt maturing, which is our top priority. We have multiple pathways to address these obligations. First, we have $830 million of unencumbered assets, including $150 million of unrestricted cash. Second, we expect $425 million in net liquidity from portfolio maturities and pending asset resolutions over the next 12 months. Third, we intend to further accelerate sales as we move out of nonperforming loan and REO positions. We expect the combination of these items to delever the balance sheet, which may pressure book value depending on the size, timing and pricing of such actions. And last, we've demonstrated our ability to access the capital markets, including our successful debt issuance earlier this year and expect new debt issuance to replace a part of the maturing debt. We expect a more conservative posturing of the company regarding new investments and dividend policy as we work through our maturities. Regarding the dividend, we will evaluate the current level in December and determine at that time the most appropriate level in the context of progress in the business plan, liquidity levels for managing the 2026 maturities, and competing sources of liquidity. With that, I'll turn it over to Andrew to go through the quarterly results.