Thanks, Tony. RGA reported pretax adjusted operating income of $314 million for the quarter or $3.62 per share after tax. Pretax adjusted operating income, excluding notable items, was $508 million for the quarter or $6.13 per share after tax. For the trailing 12 months, adjusted operating return on equity, excluding notable items, was 15.5%. This was a busy and productive quarter. We delivered excellent overall results above our targeted run rate for the quarter which included two material in-force actions. We added significantly to the long-term value of our business, which adds recurring earnings, and we continue to execute on our strategic initiatives. With strong new business momentum, we deployed $382 million into in-force block transactions in the quarter. For the first nine months of the year, the value of in-force business margins increased by $4.6 billion or 13.9%, reflecting strong new business as well as balance sheet management actions designed to increase long-term value. I will provide further details shortly. Additionally, we had another quarter of in-force management actions in the U.S. that had positive impact on results and will have an ongoing impact to future earnings. Lastly, we are closing on the final capital raise for Ruby Re, as Tony mentioned, and executed an additional retrocession of a U.S. PRT deal in the third quarter. Reported premiums were up 3.2% for the quarter over a strong third quarter of 2023. This quarter included approximately $600 million from a single premium U.S. PRT transaction in our Financial Solutions business compared to approximately $800 million in the prior year quarter. Our traditional business premium growth was a healthy 8.5% for the quarter and 7.9% year-to-date on a constant currency basis. Premiums are a good indicator of the ongoing strength in our traditional business and we continue to have good momentum across our regions. In this regard, I will note that the U.S. premiums were up 6.7%, reflecting both in-force block transactions and strong new business. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 23% on a pretax adjusted operating income, below the expected range, primarily related to income earned in non-U.S. jurisdictions. For the full-year, we expect the effective tax rate to be at the lower end of the 24% to 25% range. I now want to make a few comments on notable items reported in the period. As presented on Slide 7 of our earnings presentation, there were two key drivers impacting notable items. The first was the completion of the annual actuarial assumption review. The impact to current period pretax adjusted operating income is an unfavorable $58 million. However, the impact to expected future cash flows from the assumption of rates is a positive $100 million contribution to the value of in-force business margins. In other words, the net economic long-term impact of the actuarial assumption review is a positive $42 million. As a reminder, the economic impacts that are not recognized in the current period will be recognized over the remaining life of the business. The primary drivers of the current period charge were updated lapse rate assumptions on term life products in India, partially offset by favorable mortality updates in the U.S. and Canada. The second driver of notable items was the expected future recapture of retroceded business starting in 2025. This is the result of our decision to increase our retention limit, which is effective January 1, 2025. Under U.S. GAAP accounting, the impacts of the expected future recapture are recognized in the current period. As noted in the presentation, this notable item resulted in a $136 million unfavorable impact to pretax adjusted operating income in the third quarter. However, we expect a favorable impact of approximately $20 million to 2025 run rates, increasing to $40 million per year by 2030 and $60 million per year by 2040. In total, this action is expected to have a favorable $1.5 billion impact to the value of in-force business margins that will be recognized over the remaining life of the business. This is a good example of us managing our business to unlock long-term value for shareholders. Finally, before turning to the quarterly segment results, I would like to speak to Slide 8 in our earnings presentation. This displays the total company claims experience and the related financial statement impact. Biometric experience, which includes mortality, morbidity and longevity, has been positive over the last six quarters. In the current period, underlying biometric experience was favorable relative to expectations with the U.S., Asia and EMEA all favorable. The financial statement impact recognized in the current quarter, on the other hand, was minimal. The difference between actual experience and the financial statement impact is a function of LDTI cohorting and duration of the business. Turning to the quarterly segment results, starting on Slide 6. The U.S. and Latin America Traditional segment results reflected favorable in-force management actions and benefits from other rate increases. In these cases, there's a catch-up effect and then ongoing benefits in the future. Overall claims experience was slightly favorable, while the financial impact was slightly unfavorable due to where the experience occurred by LDTI cohort. The U.S. Financial Solutions segment results were below expectations due to lower contributions from new business. Canada Traditional segment results reflected modestly unfavorable experience. However, year-to-date underlying mortality experience is favorable. The Financial Solutions segment in Canada reflected the negative impact of modest one-time item. In the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, the traditional segment results were modestly above expectations and reflected favorable experience, both in the UK and on the continent and was consistent across profitable and capped cohorts. EMEA Financial Solutions segment results were above expectations, reflecting the impact of strong new business in recent periods Turning to our Asia Pacific region. The traditional segment results were above expectations, reflecting some one-time items as well as favorable claims experience. Underwriting experience was favorable on an economic basis, but the bottom line impact was in line as the favorable experience in profitable cohorts was deferred into the future. Financial Solutions segment results were solid, reflecting favorable overall experience, partially offset by a delayed impact from recent transactions due to planned portfolio repositioning. The Corporate and Other segment reported a pretax adjusted operating loss of $18 million favorable compared to the expected quarterly average run rate, primarily due to higher investment income. Moving to investments on Slides 10 through 13. The non-spread portfolio yield for the quarter was 5.08% as compared to 4.72% a year ago, reflecting the impact of new money rates, benefits from previous portfolio repositioning as part of our balance sheet management and variable investment income that was in line versus expectations. For non-spread business, our new money rate was 5.68%, which was down from the second quarter, but still well above the portfolio yield. Credit impairments were minimal, and we believe the portfolio remains well positioned. Related to capital management. As shown on Slides 14 and 15, our capital and liquidity positions remained strong, and we ended the quarter with excess capital of approximately $700 million. We had another strong quarter of capital deployed into in-force block transactions across multiple geographies. We expect to remain active in deploying capital into opportunities to achieve attractive returns as our pipeline remains healthy. As part of our planning for continued growth in the fourth quarter, we will be evaluating how we view excess capital across the multiple frameworks we manage. We believe our excess or current excess capital estimate is conservative. Additionally, we continue to be active in seeking various forms of capital to effectively and efficiently fund these opportunities. This is demonstrated by Ruby Re, where we are closing on the final capital raise, bringing the total capital raise to the higher end of the $400 million to $500 million range previously disclosed. We are very happy with the level of interest expressed by investors, and this gives us confidence that there will be interest in future vehicles that we pursue. We successfully completed a retrocession of $350 million of liabilities to Ruby Re in the third quarter. Including the additional capital raised, we have roughly two-thirds of the capital capacity left available to be deployed. During the quarter, we continued our long track record of increasing book value per share. As shown on Slide 16, our book value per share, excluding AOCI and impacts from B36 embedded derivatives increased to $151.79, which represents a compounded annual growth rate of 10.4% since the beginning of 2021. Turning to the value of in-force business margins on Slide 17. As mentioned, the metric has grown by over $4.6 billion or 13.9% during the first nine months of 2024 and ended the quarter at $37.6 billion. This is split roughly evenly between our traditional and financial solutions business. The increase was primarily driven by strong new business, which contributed $3.8 billion and $2 billion from balance sheet management actions. This includes $1.5 billion from the expected retrocession to recapture and around $500 million from management actions executed in 2024 and previously discussed. These increases were partially offset by the unwind of in-force margins that contributed to earnings during the year. Overall, the growth of this metric is a testament to our ongoing success in delivering long-term value to the enterprise and to shareholders. To summarize, we've had a great first nine months of the year. We continue to see very good opportunities across our geographies and business lines, and we are well positioned to execute on our strategic plan. With that, I would like to take a moment to thank everyone for your continued interest in RGA. This concludes our prepared remarks. We would now like to open it up for questions.