Thanks, Emma. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining our call today. As we report our fourth quarter and full year earnings, another, what I would say a very solid quarter and a very good year consistent with earnings across all of our business lines. As we began 2023, we set out on a path to pivot our business to become more of an alternative asset manager, while maintaining the very same discipline that got us here in asset classes and the operating companies that we own. Book value year-over-year is essentially unchanged despite all the volatility we saw in the markets. There was a little bit of warrant dilution from some warrants that were issued back in 2020 and we distributed a little under $500 million to shareholders. We continue to create solid earnings quarter-after-quarter and we did a couple of very strategic transactions, which put us in a position to, one, maintain earnings, and two, grow our alternative asset business. In the fourth quarter, we closed on Sculptor. We also announced the acquisition of a leading third-party servicer in SLS, which was acquired from Computershare. We expect that to close sometime here in the first quarter. As we look forward, the growth of our asset management business will be critical to the revaluing of our equity in our company and just the overall valuation of what we do here at Rithm. 2024 and beyond should be a very good investing year and the environments -- in the current environment and as we look forward, we are extremely well-positioned to invest in all asset classes, whether that'd be real estate, I think, it's important to note we have no legacy real estate, credit, structured products, equities, et cetera. Anything in the financial services sector, we will have a hard look at. The results at both Rithm and the Sculptor companies in '23 were excellent and the long-term performance in both the REIT and the asset management business put us in a position to be at the top of the pack. This should enable us to grow our credit and real estate businesses while prioritizing results for our LPs and shareholders. To be clear, results matter. This will always trump any growth aspirations we may have as a company. Our mortgage company continues to be best-in-class. We're a top three or four non-bank mortgage company here in the US. Between Rithm and Newrez, our mortgage company, we have approximately $850 billion pro forma of mortgage servicing rights, which continue to provide great income and great cash flow for our investors. As we look at the macro environment, yes, the Fed has been clear about their desire to lower rates. However, we don't see that happening until inflation comes down a little bit closer to the Fed target of 2% and the data softens. Friday's employment data as well as some of the other recent economic releases that we've seen should keep the Fed on hold for the March meeting. Regarding our positioning, we are close to home we have -- as we have been in years, as we have hedges against all of our servicing assets. I will now refer to the supplement, which has been posted online. And we're going to start on Page 3. Start of a new chapter. As we think about, again the repositioning of Rithm as a global alternative asset manager, couple of things to point out on this slide. At the Rithm level, we have a $35 billion balance sheet, there's $7 billion of book equity. We paid out $5 billion of dividends since the company was started in 2013. And our total shareholder return for 2023 was 43%. Sculptor, world-class asset management business $33 billion under management in verticals such as real estate, credit, multi-strat funds, and a large CLO business. The combination of the two businesses, or when you think about the different businesses and their performance on both has been -- it puts us in a real position to continue to be a formidable player in the all space. Page 4, our financial highlights, 2023. Book value at the end of December was $11.90. Our GAAP net income, we had a loss of $88 million that's attributable to a write-down of some of our MSR assets. Earnings available for distribution $247 million or $0.51 per diluted share. Common dividend $0.25. At the end of '23, we had $1.9 billion of cash and liquidity. And total equity of $7 billion at the Rithm level. For the full year, earnings, $533 million, or $1.10 per diluted share. Earnings available for distribution, $997 million or $2.06 per diluted share. Total economic return 7.2%. Return-on-equity 9.3% from a GAAP perspective and 17.4% for earnings after distribution. Book value was essentially unchanged. And again, this factors in warrants, dividends, et cetera. As we think about our new chapter, what are the dynamics that we're seeing in the marketplace today and what are some of the things that we've done at the Rithm level. In July of last year or second quarter, Goldman announced they were pulling back on their Marcus business. So we went out and we acquired $1.4 billion of consumer loans from Goldman Sachs. As we think about the banks continuing to retreat, Civic, which was a division of PacWest, we acquired a portfolio of residential transitional loans that were originated by Civic. We expanded our direct lending capabilities to our Genesis Capital business, which makes residential transitional loans to builders and developers throughout the United States. To grow our alternative asset management business, we acquired Sculptor. When we think about funding gaps, dislocated sectors like commercial real estate have a real need for gap capital and equity infusions not having legacy commercial real estate exposure, puts us in a very, very good place from a strategic standpoint. Underfunded sectors, such as construction financing, provide great opportunities for our Genesis Capital business. As we think about capabilities, the acquisition of SLS, which is truly a third-party servicer helps us grow our fee-based business in the third-party servicing business and we'll get to those slides in a little bit here. As we think about our performance and we'll get into some of the numbers shortly. Both the Rithm business and the Sculptor funds had a very, very good 2023. As we think about partnerships, we want to extend our global reach with partnerships throughout the world to create capital solutions to help us deploy more capital and then co-invest alongside of our different business lines that we have here at both the Rithm and the Sculptor levels. Page 6, Sculptor. $33 billion of AUM under management if you look across the different verticals, large credit business, large real estate business and a great multi-strat fund. And we'll talk about that shortly. When you look at the clients, 70% of the clients have been partners for over a decade. We've deployed, at the Sculptor level $200 billion of capital in credit investments. 70% of the AUM is longer duration. The investment leaders in the business fit over greater than 15 years at Sculptor and then we have one team, one incentive structure, and we want to operate as a team and be really transparent with our LPs and shareholders. Page 7, 2023 performance and looking back. The credit funds, there's two credit funds. The Tactical Credit Fund net 17.9%, the Credit Opportunities Fund 8.6%, great performance and what I would call a volatile year. The multi-strat fund was up 12.8% net, that is an -- one of the industry leaders in the multi-strat business. On the real estate side, Life-to-Date performance, Real Estate Fund III, 20% net, Real Estate Fund I, 12.6% net. And then, if you look to the right, the performance. since inception, the Tactical Credit Fund was up 10.9% net. The Credit Opportunities Fund 8.8%, very good returns, and then the multi-strat is 10.6%. So overall, as I pointed out in my opening remarks, we're going to lead with performance and then we're going to build AUM around performance and hopefully grow our business with strategic LPs and partners throughout the world. As we think about the Rithm approach on Page 8, opportunity, innovation and partnership. I know these are buzzwords. We expect our private credit -- private capital business to continue to grow as there's a number of sectors that have needs for funding and we see banks pulling back in different areas. Innovation, we've been very much on the forefront of creating innovation. Keep in mind, Rithm, which was formerly known as New Residential, was born out of a commercial REIT at Fortress back in 2013. Started out as a -- as an MSR-only REIT, and then we've grown into this full scale operating business where we have obviously an asset manager. We have the large REIT, and then we have our operating companies as well. And then partnership track records matter. We all know that, and that's something we're very, very focused on. Baron's here, I'm going to let Baron talk about the mortgage company and we'll take those slides out at -- on Page 9.