Thank you, Rob, and hello, everyone. I’ll now take you through our first quarter results in more detail and provide you with an outlook for the second quarter of 2025. On Page 4 of the supplemental presentation, we provide our first quarter financial highlights. As Rob noted, we posted net income of $7 million and diluted earnings per share of $0.70, directly in line with our guidance, but lower than the first quarter of 2024 due to the benefit in the prior year period of the fourth quarter 2023 special loan sale. Our results continue to be supported by our solid portfolio and revenue growth, healthy credit profile, expense discipline and a strong balance sheet. Turning to Page 5, we only modestly liquidated our portfolio in the quarter, despite the first quarter typically being the seasonally softest quarter for originations. This is thanks to our efforts to grow in newly opened branches and lean back into growth across our network, with new originations continuing to focus on our higher margin and auto-secured segments. From a risk standpoint, we continue to originate roughly 60% of our loans to applicants in our top two risk ranks. Total originations reached record levels for our first quarter and were up 20% year-over-year, with branch, direct mail and digital originations up 17%, 18% and 46%, respectively, from the prior year period. As we mentioned last quarter, barring any meaningful macroeconomic headwinds, we expect our pace of growth to increase for the rest of the year due to our confidence in our credit performance and our ability to generate growth in new markets without opening up the credit box. Page 6 displays our portfolio growth and product mix through the first quarter. We closed the quarter with net finance receivables of $1.9 billion, up $146 million year-over-year. Our auto-secured portfolio at the end of the quarter represents 12% of our total portfolio, up from 9% at the end of the first quarter of 2024. Our small loan portfolio increased 11% year-over-year and at the end of the quarter approximately 18% of our portfolio carried an APR greater than 36%, up from 16% a year ago. As Rob has consistently noted, we like the results we’re seeing from our barbell strategy of growth in our high-quality auto-secured portfolio and higher-margin small loan portfolio. While the growth in our higher-margin small loan book has an impact on our total portfolio credit performance, the impact is mitigated by the growth in our auto-secured book, which remains the best-performing segment in our portfolio. At the end of the quarter, auto-secured had a 30-plus day delinquency rate of 1.7% and the lowest credit losses of all of our products. Though our higher-margin portfolio was down sequentially due to pay-downs from the strong tax season, we’ll continue to pursue our barbell strategy in a measured way moving forward. Looking ahead to the second quarter, we anticipate our ending net receivables to be up roughly $55 million to $60 million sequentially, compared to a $29 million sequential increase in the second quarter of 2024 due to normal seasonal growth across our network following tax season and from growth in our newly opened branches. We expect our average net receivables to be up roughly $15 million sequentially as our second quarter growth is seasonally weighted towards the back half of the quarter. As the year progresses, we will take further advantage of seasonally higher consumer demand to drive quality portfolio growth. However, we’ll remain selective in approving borrowers while continuing to monitor the economy, and as always, we’ll focus on originating loans that maximize our margins and bottomline results. Turning to Page 7, total revenue grew to $153 million in the first quarter, up 6% from the prior year period or 7.4% when adjusted for loan sale revenue benefits in the first quarter of last year. Our total revenue yield and interest and fee yield were 32.4% and 28.9%, respectively, each up slightly from the prior year period after adjusting for loan sale benefits in the prior year period. Total revenue yield was down 100 basis points sequentially due to seasonally higher revenue reversals from net credit losses, lower revenue acceleration from seasonally lower refinancing activities and the 20-basis-point benefit in the prior quarter from the release of personal property insurance reserves related to hurricane activity. In the second quarter, we expect total revenue yield to rise by roughly 20 basis points sequentially, consistent with seasonal patterns. Moving to Page 8, our portfolio continues to perform well. Our 30-plus-day delinquency rate to the quarter end was 7.1%, 60 basis points better sequentially and flat year-over-year, despite an estimated 10-basis-point negative impact from growth in our higher margin portfolio and another 10-basis-point negative impact related to 2024 hurricane activity. Our net credit losses of 58.4 million were better than our outlook by $1.6 million. When excluding the loan sale benefit of 270 basis points in the prior year period, our annualized net credit loss rate of 12.4% in the first quarter of this year was 90 basis points better year-over-year, despite a 30-basis-point negative impact from our higher margin portfolio. As we’ve discussed in the past, the higher yields on this portfolio more than make up for the credit drag, resulting in overall improved margins. In the second quarter, we expect our delinquency rate to gradually improve due in part to the seasonal benefit of payments generated by tax refunds in April. We anticipate that our net credit losses will be approximately $57 million in the second quarter or a net credit loss rate of approximately 12%. Second quarter net credit losses will include $1.6 million of losses associated with the 2024 hurricane event, impacting our net credit loss rate by 40 basis points in the quarter. We’re fully reserved for these hurricane losses as of the end of the first quarter. Excluding the hurricane impact, we expect our second quarter net credit loss rate to be 80 basis points better sequentially and 110 basis points better than the second quarter of last year. Turning to Page 9, our first quarter allowance for credit loss reserve rate remains steady at 10.5%. We decreased our reserve slightly in the quarter to $199.1 million, primarily due to our small portfolio liquidation. We’re comfortable with our reserve levels despite the recent economic uncertainty. We’ve consistently reflected a higher stress downside scenario in our model and the weighted average unemployment rate embedded in our model for the end of 2025 is 5.2%. Looking to the second quarter, subject to economic conditions and portfolio performance, we expect our reserve rate to decline to 10.3% at the end of the quarter due to the release of the remaining special hurricane reserves against the associated net credit losses. Flipping to Page 10, we continue to closely manage our spending while investing in our growth capabilities and strategic initiatives. Our G&A expenses of $66 million in the first quarter were $5.6 million higher than the prior year period. The increase was primarily driven by $1.7 million of incentive expenses shifting from the second quarter to the first quarter and by investment in growth, which included $1.9 million of expenses associated with 17 new branches opened within the past year and roughly $600,000 of incremental marketing expenses in legacy markets. First quarter G&A expense was higher than our guidance due to the incentive expense timing. Our annualized operating expense ratio was 14% in the first quarter, 30 basis points higher than the prior year period, but 10 basis points better year-over-year after adjusting for the incentive expense timing despite our new branch openings and increased marketing expense. The 17 new branches had $3.6 million of revenue in the quarter against $1.9 million of G&A expense, further demonstrating the power of our branch-based model. In the second quarter, we expect G&A expenses to be roughly $65.5 million. We continue to invest in growth and our strategic initiatives, and we’re experiencing increased expenses from servicing a larger number of accounts. Moving forward, we’ll continue to carefully manage expenses while also investing in our core business in ways that improve our operating efficiency over time and ensure our long-term success and profitability. Turning to Pages 11 and 12, our interest expense for the first quarter was $19.8 million or 4.2% of average net receivables on an annualized basis, better than our outlook on lower average debt and lower fees. At the end of the quarter, we closed a $265 million asset-backed securitization transaction at a weighted average coupon of 5.3%, comparable to our prior ABS deal and a 90-basis-point improvement from our second quarter 2024 deal. This transaction once again demonstrates the strength of our ABS platform. As of March 31st, 90% of our debt was fixed rate with a weighted average coupon of 4.4% and a weighted average revolving duration of 1.4 years. In the second quarter, we expect interest expense to be approximately $21 million or 4.4% of average net receivables. As a reminder, as our lower fixed rate funding matures and we continue to grow using variable rate debt, our interest expense will increase as a percentage of average net receivables. In addition, our balance sheet remains strong and we continue to maintain ample liquidity to fund our growth. We had $641 million of total unused capacity and $129 million of available liquidity as a quarter end. We also had nearly $200 million of lifetime loan loss reserves, as well as $358 million of stockholders’ equities or approximately $35.48 in book value per share. We will continue to maintain a strong balance sheet with ample liquidity and borrowing capacity, diversified and staggered funding sources and a sensible interest rate management strategy. On the income tax line, we incurred an effective tax rate of 23.5% in the first quarter. And for the second quarter of 2025, we expect an effective tax rate of approximately 24.5% prior to discrete items. On the bottomline, we expect that our second quarter net income will be roughly $7 million to $7.3 million, reflecting the impact of our increased portfolio growth on the provision for credit loss line. As we discussed on our last earnings call, subject to the economic backdrop, we expect to meaningfully increase net income in 2025, with the timing of 2025 net income being back and weighted as we benefit in the second half of the year on the revenue lines from a larger portfolio size and on the credit and revenue lines from seasonally lower net credit losses. Aside from investing in our growth and strategic initiatives, we continue to allocate excess capital for dividends and 30 million share repurchase programs. Our Board of Directors declared a dividend of $0.30 per common share for the second quarter. The dividend will be paid on June 11, 2025 to shareholders of record as of the close of business on May 21, 2025. Pursuant to our buyback program, we repurchased approximately 187,000 shares of our common stock in the first quarter at a weighted average price of $34.56 per share. Finally, I’ll note that we provide a summary of our second quarter 2025 guidance on Page 14 of our earnings supplement. That concludes my remarks. I’ll now turn the call back over to Rob.