Thank you, Rick, and good morning to you all. We started the year with another strong quarter of operating results, producing net income of $145 million or $0.98 per diluted share, consistent with the $0.98 per diluted share reported in the fourth quarter 2024. Adjusted diluted net operating income per share was slightly higher at $0.99 for the first quarter compared to $1.08 in the previous quarter. We generated a return on equity of 12.6%, reflecting the strong fundamentals of our business and grew book value per share 11% year-over-year to $32.48. This book value per share growth is in addition to our regular stockholder dividends, which were $37 million during the quarter. We also repurchased $207 million of shares during the first quarter, demonstrating our commitment to returning excess capital. Turning now to the detailed drivers of our results. Our revenues continued to be strong in the first quarter. We generated $318 million of total revenues during the quarter, a slight increase from the fourth quarter of last year. Slides 10 through 12 in our presentation include details on our mortgage insurance in-force portfolio as well as other key factors impacting our net premiums earned. We generated $234 million in net premiums earned in the quarter, consistent with the prior quarter. Our large high-quality primary mortgage insurance in-force portfolio grew year-over-year to $274 billion as of the end of the first quarter. We wrote $9.5 billion of new insurance written in the first quarter of 2025, which was lower compared to the fourth quarter of 2024, primarily due to a smaller origination market. As interest rates remain elevated, they also continue to benefit the persistency rate of our existing insurance in force, which highlights the balance and resiliency of our business model. As shown on Slide 10, our persistency rate increased to 86% this quarter, which was the second highest rate we observed in over 10 years. We remain focused on writing NIW that we believe will generate future earnings and economic value while effectively maintaining the portfolio's health, balance and profitability. As of the end of the first quarter, approximately 2/3 of our insurance in force had a mortgage rate of 6% or less. Given current mortgage interest rates, these policies are less likely to cancel due to refinancing in the near term, and we, therefore, continue to expect our persistency rate to remain strong. As shown on Slide 12, the in-force premium yield for our Mortgage Insurance portfolio remained stable as expected at 38 basis points, and we expect the in-force premium yield to remain generally stable for the remainder of the year as well. As shown on Slide 13, our investment portfolio of $6.3 billion consists of well-diversified, highly rated securities and other high-quality assets. We generated net investment income of $69 million in the first quarter. Included in this net investment income was $6 million of income related to residential mortgage loans held for sale within Radian Mortgage Capital. Compared to prior quarter, the decline in net investment income is primarily driven by lower mortgage loans held for sale. Our unrealized net loss on investments reflected in stockholders' equity was $295 million at quarter end. We continue to expect that our strong liquidity and cash flow position will provide us with the ability to hold these securities to recovery of the remaining unrealized losses, which would equate to $2.09 that is expected to accrete back into our book value per share over time. I will now move on to our provision for losses and related credit trends, which continue to be positive with strong cure activity and very low claim levels. On Slide 16, we provide trends for our primary default inventory. Total defaults decreased to approximately 23,000 loans at quarter end, resulting in a portfolio default rate of 2.33% compared to 2.44% in the previous quarter. The number of new defaults reported to us by services declined to approximately 12,500 in the first quarter compared to approximately 14,000 reported in the fourth quarter, a decline of 10%. This quarterly decline in new defaults reflects typical seasonal trends as well as lower defaults in areas associated with Hurricane Celine and Milton. Excluding those hurricane-impacted areas, new defaults still declined by 7% in the first quarter compared to prior quarter. It is important to note that our new defaults continue to contain significant embedded equity, which has been a key driver of recent favorable trends, including higher cure rates and reduced severity for policies that result in claims submission. In addition, the total number of cures in the first quarter grew 13% compared to the fourth quarter. Cure rates continue to be really strong with cure rates for February and March 2025, among the 5 highest months we have observed in at least 10 years. Our loss ratio remained low with a net expense of $15 million in our Mortgage Insurance provision for losses in the first quarter compared to a de minimis amount in the fourth quarter. Let's turn to Slide 18. As mentioned last quarter, we reduced our initial default to claim rate to 7.5% and maintained that rate in the first quarter, which resulted in $54 million of loss provision for new defaults. Positive reserve development on prior period defaults of $39 million partially offset this provision for new defaults. As shown on Slide 17, our cure trends have been very consistent and positive in recent periods. With approximately 90% of defaults curing within 4 quarters and 98% curing within 12 quarters, meaningfully exceeding our initial default to claim expectation, which anticipated approximately a 92% cure rate. Cure rates in the first quarter exhibited typical seasonal trends and compare favorably to similar periods for prior years. Moving to our other business lines. Total revenue in our all-other category were $36 million in the first quarter, an increase compared to $34 million in the fourth quarter. The adjusted pretax operating loss for all other was approximately $3.5 million in the first quarter. Now turning to our other expenses. For the first quarter, our other operating expenses totaled $77 million, a 12% decrease from prior quarter. Operating expenses were in line with our expectations as communicated last quarter. As a reminder, for 2025, we expect operating expenses of $320 million or to average $80 million per quarter. While we continue to actively manage our operating expenses and seek opportunities for additional efficiencies, it is important to note that expenses can fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter due to changes in items such as variable incentive compensation and investments in strategic growth initiatives. Moving to our capital, available liquidity and related strategic actions. Radian Guaranty's financial position remains strong. We paid a $200 million distribution to Radian Group in the first quarter while maintaining a stable PMIERs cushion of $2.1 billion. As highlighted on Slide 21, Radian sought and received approval from the Pennsylvania Insurance Department to treat the $200 million distribution paid in the first quarter as a return of capital rather than an ordinary dividend. As a result, Radian Guaranty's common stock and paid-in surplus balance reduced from $500 million to $300 million during the quarter, while its positive unassigned surplus grew to $408 million, strengthening Radian Guaranty's ability to pay additional ordinary dividends in the future. We expect that Radian Guaranty will pay up to $795 million of total distributions to Radian Group in 2025, in line with its 2024 statutory net income. This $795 million of total capital return includes both this first quarter distribution and expected future ordinary dividends over the remainder of the year. Moving to our holding company, Radian Group. Within the quarter, we repurchased 6.5 million shares of our common stock at a total cost of $207 million for an average price paid of $32.07. In addition, we returned $37 million in shareholder dividends for a total of $244 million of capital returned in the quarter. As of the end of the first quarter, we had $336 million remaining on our current share repurchase authorization. As demonstrated by repurchase activity in the quarter, our expectation for a similar level of repurchase volume in the second quarter and our track record in recent years, we continue to believe that share repurchase provides an attractive option to deploy our excess capital. Our available holding company liquidity was $834 million at the end of the first quarter. The decline in liquidity this quarter of approximately $50 million was due to higher share repurchases, which we believe was an attractive use of a portion of our excess liquidity. We also have a credit facility with borrowing capacity of $275 million, providing us with additional financial flexibility for short-term cash management, including activity in support of our capital return opportunities. In April 2025, consistent with our use of risk distribution strategies to effectively manage capital and proactively mitigate risk, Radian Guaranty agreed to a multiyear quota share reinsurance arrangement with a panel of third-party reinsurance providers. We are very pleased with these transactions, which further mitigate the tail risk of our portfolio and provide efficient PMIERs capital relief at a low cost of capital. The market demand for mortgage insurance risk is strong as evidenced by the attractive terms we secured and the expansive group of over 20 highly rated reinsurers that are party to the arrangement, 9 of which are new to Radian. Further, securing quota share coverage on our new production through June 30, 2028, provides us with both a high certainty of coverage as well as significant flexibility. We believe we are very well positioned to continue effectively managing our PMIERs position at Radian Guaranty from a position of strength. I will now turn the call back over to Rick.