Thanks, Emma. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us. The first quarter for Rithm continued to show the earnings power of our company. With the high levels of volatility seen in the markets as a result of the regional banking crisis, our investment portfolios performed extremely well. We have been clear from the beginning that we would not fight the Fed and that has proven to be a good strategy as book value is essentially unchanged away from a warrant exercise of 9.3 million shares during the quarter, which impacted book value by $0.23. Over the past two years despite the Fed raising rates, we grew book value away from the warrant dilution by 12.3%, while paying out $1 billion in dividends. Our operating businesses perform well across the board. The challenges the regional banks are having and have had will create greater opportunities for all of our lending business lines and we also see a huge pipeline of opportunities on both the asset side, as well as in some potential M&A. I can't remember a period of time when we were working on so many different deals and we're really excited about what's to come. Cash and liquidity sits in and around $1.5 billion, putting us in a great position to take advantage of the market dislocations we're seeing. We do expect plenty of assets to come out for sale into the marketplace as a result of some of the market dislocations. Our third party fund business continues to be a major focus as we transition to growing our business as an alternative asset manager. With that in mind, we are evaluating alternatives for our mortgage company and will likely file an S-1 in the coming months. This will allow us to create other pools of liquidity to the extent we create a public entity and further diversify our business model. On the capital raising side, we believe that we will raise significant pools of capital here over the course of the next three to nine months which will allow us to grow earnings even more in the near future. Regarding our stock price, I feel that we're extremely undervalued. There are not many investment managers that can point to a 10 year track record with core earnings approximately 13% to 15% after paying out $4.5 billion of dividends. It's time to see our share price reflect our performance. The notion that financial service companies with operating business lines trade below book or at book does not make sense to me. To create what we have done in others is not easy. Finally, with the stock buyback in place, we will likely begin buying back shares over time. Obviously, we'll balance this versus other pipelines -- other investments we have in our pipeline. Now I'll refer to the supplement which has been posted online and I'm going to start with Page -- I'll start with Page four actually, the economic landscape. Obviously, with the Fed raising rates yesterday 25 basis points, again, we are not going to fight the Fed here with the market expectations that the Fed will lower rates here towards the end of the year. We are going to continue to maintain our course, which is not to fight the Fed, stay close to home, not have significant interest rate bets and continue to try to keep stable book and grow earnings for our company. The stress in the banking system will likely continue. And again, we do think this is going to create good opportunities for us as we're going to see more assets come out for sales in the marketplace. Page 5, earnings. GAAP net income for the quarter is $68.9 million or $0.14 per diluted share, earnings available for distribution also known as core earnings $171.1 million or $0.35 per diluted share. First quarter common dividend, $0.25, at the end of March we're trading at a 12.5% dividend yield. Cash and liquidity at the end of the quarter, $1.6 billion, total equity at the end of the quarter is $6.9 billion. Book value, again, $11.67, that reflects a $0.23 dilution from the impact of the warrant exercise. Last quarter, just for reference, was $12. So essentially, if you think about it this way, $12 versus $11.90 despite all the volatility we saw in the markets is a pretty good result for the company. Page 6, the evolution of the company. We've expanded this slide a little bit just to show a little bit more detail. The team is very, very proud of what's been created. The company was born in 2013 as a result of the bank selling MSRs under the -- when we externally managed by Fortress In 2013, we bought $4 billion of loans from SpringCastle, 2015 the HLSS transaction, which was really transformational for our company at that time. 2017, we still own Prosper. We bought -- we own 35% in [Soros] (ph) and [ThirdPoint] (ph) and Jefferies, bought 35% of Prosper for $0.01 in exchange for buying some loans. We're still in that deal. 2018, Shellpoint, NewRez, that was an acquisition that created a fully licensed operating company. 2019, we bought Ditech out of bankruptcy as well as Gordian, which is our property press business. 2021 we bought Caliber, 2021 we bought Genesis, which is our business purpose lender. And then at the end of 2022 we bought GreenBarn, we internalized our manager in 2022 and then 2023, we launched our private credit business or private capital business and we also launched Europe. So real growth, real strategic as we think about where we're headed with our business. Page 7, Rithm 2.0 I'll spend just a second on this. Operating companies, obviously, you can see to the left, investment portfolio what we currently have in our business today. And then when you add our private capital business as we continue to work hard and grow that, we do have some big aspirations to take us to the next level in an alternative asset space. The other thing, just to point out, when you look at where alternative asset managers trade versus REITs, that's another reason why we're pivoting to growing into an alternative asset manager. Page 9, our mortgage company, I have Baron here. So when we get into Q&A, I'm sure Baron will answer some questions. Essentially, a very good quarter for the company. Everybody reports their earnings different in this space. I'd encourage you to have a look at the way that we report versus some of our other friends and peers out there. The origination segment down $11.7 million, that's really just March and February seasonality. I'm sorry, January and February from a seasonality perspective. March was breakeven. We laid out our corporate expense, pretax income for the company for the quarter of $164 million. We also laid out a pretax ROE excluding the MSR mark for Q1, which is a little under 15%. When we look at the space today and we look at the opportunities around potential M&A or potential assets, there's plenty of activity going on. So I think the look of the company today won't be the look of the company as we go forward down the road. Third party UPB, we've grown 18% since the beginning of 2022. There's a couple of opportunities for us to continue to grow that. We will do that. Delinquencies remain extremely low and we continue to focus on customer retention, obviously, reducing expenses, profitability, branding and anything else that you'd want to be when you think about a very well-run consumer company. For other metrics we service. We have 3 million customers in our portfolio. Our total portfolio of MSRs as a company is $600 billion. During the quarter, we funded $7 billion of origination. Baron will talk to what we expect for the rest of the year. And then the other slide – the other point on the slide to take a look at is our G&A numbers down 53% year-over-year and 12% quarter-over-quarter. Page 10, origination side. Again, I'm not going to spend a ton of time here. Once again $600 billion of MSRs, we don't need to buy another MSR unless we think they're extremely attractive. Right now we do think they're extremely attractive and we will likely pursue any and all opportunities around what we think are going to create 15% to 20% IRRs for that business. When we look at the funding and the channels, DTC is going to remain relatively quiet as most of the MSRs that we have in our portfolio are low coupon MSRs. I believe our gross WAC is 3.8%. When you look at JV and Retail, same as we get into the season for purchasing homes, that channel will grow and then corresponding in the wholesale is really something that you control based on your pricing in the marketplace. Page 11. When we look at the mortgage company and compare that to Rithm as a whole, the mortgage company represents 75% of Rithm's full MSR portfolio. Newly originated MSRs for the quarter, 6.37%, again, most of the MSRs that we have in our portfolio are well out of the money. Prepayment speeds are give or take 4% to 5% CPR. Page 12. When you look at multiples, a multiple right now is roughly 4.9 times, that includes all of our seasons. MSR is essentially roughly unchanged in the quarter. Again, 4% to 5% CPR for the full portfolio, unlevered returns, give or take something between an 8% and 10% right now is what we're seeing in the marketplace. Page 13. Our commercial real estate business, GreenBarn and folks. We're starting to see opportunities across the board there. I'd like to slide when you think about where we were and where we are, we have a 25 person team or so now dedicated to focus on opportunities in the space. When you look to the bottom from an investment strategy, we will be doing and are doing some direct lending on assets. We'll be focused on distressed asset strategies or acquiring distressed assets. We're working with different developers around redevelopment and potential opportunities for equity. And then when we look at other platform investments, there's a huge need in that space for liquidity, both debt and equity as you think about the maturity wall coming up where there's roughly $1.5 trillion of loans that will mature over the next three years. We do think most loans will get extended. There'll be -- the B and C type properties will not. And we think that's going to create a great opportunity for our business as we go forward. Page 14, our Genesis business. We've diversified a lot there from where we were when we first acquired the company. We're adding more and more new sponsors, some of these are going to be more around the fix and flip business. During the first quarter, we did a little under $400 million asset yields there are unlevered anywhere from 10% to 12% with a tad of leverage. You're going to see 20% to 30% returns. We are going to grow that business. We're looking at opportunities there with the regional banks, likely contracting from a credit perspective. This will create, again, greater opportunities for us to deploy capital in that space. Single family rental space, essentially unchanged quarter-over-quarter. We are looking at a number of opportunities with different builders in the space. I think we're more likely to grow around larger asset acquisitions, as well as, through our builders that we have relationships where we lend to through the Genesis business. It's a very good business model. We still as an investment company don't need to deploy capital at, what I would say, three, four or five cap rates, we are looking for higher cap rates when we balance out how we deploy capital or invest capital. Finally, the last page and then we'll turn it over to Q&A. Servicer advances, essentially unchanged quarter-over-quarter. There's really not a lot to talk about there. We'll keep our eyes out for down the road to the extent that delinquencies pick up in the space that we need to deploy more capital for advances. But overall, investment portfolio is performing extremely well, delinquency is very low and a good quarter for the company. So now, we'll turn it back to the operator for Q&A.