Thank you, Chris. I will now cover the performance of our businesses before handing it over to Brooke to cover our financial results in more detail. Residential Mortgage Banking continued its strategic momentum notwithstanding a modest quarter-over-quarter reduction in volume driven largely by seasonality. As Chris articulated, even though the timing and substance of the Basel end-game rules will inevitably evolve, bank management teams are prioritizing the ability to distribute 30-year fixed rate mortgage risks as the economics for retaining these loans have changed dramatically given the end of the era of cheap deposits. This takes commitment and time especially in aligning the standards of the capital markets with internal processes and approach. As such, we're pleased to be actively engaged profitably with sellers that control an estimated 60% of jumbo market share, including 70% of the largest 20 banks with active mortgage businesses. Overall for the fourth quarter, we launched $1.2 billion of loans at gross margins of 111 basis points, up from 80 basis points in the third quarter and above our historical target range of 75 basis point to 100 basis points. Approximately 25% of the quarter's volume was bulk activity with both banks and non-banks. Over 55% of the quarter's total lock volume came from banks, up from 38% in the third quarter. We purchased $1 billion of loans close to 15% through our unique program with depository that allows us to settle loans directly into securitizations, optimizing our capital usage. We are complementing our bank activity with a continued focus on independent mortgage bankers or IMB's a critical group of partners whose business models have always centered around distribution to capital partners such as Redwood. All in, we estimate our $2.8 billion of locks in the second half of 2023 to represent approximately 5% of total jumbo market share compared to our historical range of 2% to 3%. While higher interest rates continue to impact overall industry volumes we still believe our strategic progress is just beginning and deepening our partnerships with large market players. As such, we see significant opportunity to deploy further capital into this strategy because we support our banking partners and grow, including through the home equity financing products that Chris highlighted. Brooke will speak more to this when she covers our outlook for capital deployment. Finally for this segment securitization markets continued to be favorable, and we followed our two fourth quarter Sequoia transactions with two more thus far in 2024 backed by approximately $800 million in loans. Receptivity for these deals has been strong and this execution has supported further momentum and locks, which quarter to-date total of $750 million with continued strong credit characteristics, including 772 average Fico and 72 average LTV at an average gross coupon of 6.96%. As Chris mentioned, the broader pullback by banks is also a potential tailwind for CoreVest. The last few weeks have brought refreshed dialogue around risks in commercial real estate portfolios of banks and other large portfolio lenders. The fundamental challenges that exist in certain commercial segments have driven many traditional lenders to the sidelines, opening up a potentially attractive client funnel for our platform once lending conditions normalize. CoreVest continues to prioritize lending strategies backed by single-family and small-balance multifamily properties, the latter typically 20 units or less. Reduced demand from sponsors amid persistently high rates cause quarterly fundings to drop 17% from the third quarter to $343 million. Term loan funding volumes increased 10% however, and we continue to commit capital to our Single Asset Bridge or SAB platform and further develop other bridge product offerings. Notwithstanding the fact that rates remain elevated, we see runway to grow term production including in the potential to refinance portions of our bridge book as sponsors work towards stabilization. We continue to see several areas of heightened interest from real estate investors. After launching our debt service coverage ratio or DSCR loan product in the third quarter, we saw a 20% increase in fundings in the fourth quarter for these loans, alongside a 30% quarter-over-quarter increase in SAB production. As was the case in Q3, CoreVest were also engaged around our renovate to rent and built around products including aggregation lines, typically the Dominion of banks that support lease-up strategies one certificates of occupancy are procured. Our investor loan products continue to attract retention from Capital Partners. We distributed $111 million of loans through whole loan sales and sales to the joint venture that we closed in mid-2023. Our fourth quarter bridge loan securitization was also a significant achievement and that it allowed for increased capacity to finance our various loan types. Flexibility, we expect to be valuable over the next 24 months as lending conditions evolve. Turning to our investment portfolio. Our activities since the end of the third quarter reflect progress in the evolution of our capital deployment thesis, including active portfolio management to recycle valuable capital and manage risk. Over the past several quarters, we have spoken regularly of the significant value embedded in our broader investment portfolio. This includes the net discount to face value within our books and relatedly our ability to harvest additional capital given low levels of leverage and continued strong credit performance. The fourth quarter brought meaningful progress on this front, as we completed three securitizations out of our investment portfolio. These transactions included a resecuritization of our reperforming loan book, our first rated securitizations backed by home equity investments and a $250 million revolving transaction backed by bridge loans. We have also continued to optimize our portfolio mix through the continued sale of non-strategic assets. Credit performance within our portfolio remained strong overall. As Chris emphasized, our portfolio is back squarely by residential credit. Much of it seasoned and created organically through our operating platforms with over 85% of our overall capital underpinned by single-family housing. Our RPL, jumbo and single-family rental loan portfolios all saw stability or declines in 90-day plus delinquencies since the third quarter as borrowers remain motivated to preserve the equity in their homes and protect their advantageous interest rates. Performance in our single-family bridge portfolio, which now represents close to 60% of the overall bridge book, has remained resilient. Our SAB portfolio, an area of anticipated growth continues to pay down as expected and we are replenishing our revolving bridge securitizations predominantly with new SAP production. Additionally, sponsors continued progress with build for rent projects, many of which are now in the lease-up phase. As we highlighted in last quarter's earnings call, the multifamily bridge portfolio remains a key focus area as borrowers grappled with the prospect of an extended period of higher rates. This portfolio largely financial sponsors seeking to do modest amounts of improvement to the property, drive rents, and either sell or refinance. Loans were originally underwritten with average debt yields close to 9% and are underpinned by units fetching around $1,000 per month or less in length. A portion of the market less exposed to the upcoming delivery pipeline. While fundamentals behind these strategies, notably occupancy rates and equity in the properties remained strong, 90 plus day delinquencies have increased, driven largely by sponsors facing increased costs who lack the resources to bring the project to stabilization. This creates opportunity for fresh capital that we believe is supportive of ultimate recovery to our loan. The book remains actively managed and for approximately 30% of the portfolio, we have seen sponsors inject fresh equity or perform under recast terms and we estimate an incremental 20% of the multifamily bridge book qualifies for a term refinance today. And with that, I will turn the call over to Brooke.