Thank you, Chris. Mortgage banking performance was a key driver of our strong third quarter performance, with GAAP contribution from these businesses tripling versus the second quarter on strong margins and continued broadening of our distribution channels. Our residential consumer platform remains a valued partner to both banks and independent mortgage bankers or IMBs, with third quarter results benefiting from tightening securitization, execution, accretive hedging and continued progress in capital efficiency. The third quarter brought some notable shifts in the composition of our lock volumes, reflective of both market conditions and strategic progress with our origination partners. We locked $2.2 billion of loans during Q3, compared to $2.7 billion in the second quarter, essentially flat when adjusting for the large pool of seasoned hybrid arms we discussed on our second quarter call. After a slow July marked by heightened market volatility that predated the significant rate rally later in the quarter, August and September volumes rebounded. In spite of the rate backup since quarter end, we are finishing up an equally active October, helped in part by a revamped set of guidelines on new production hybrid arms, which has been met with favorable early feedback across our seller base. Third quarter volume was split evenly between bulk and flow, with IMB volume accounting for close to 60% of total production. Our loan sourcing remains well diversified across a deep seller base and year-to-date we have locked loans with over 160 discrete originators with no one seller representing more than 7% of total flow volume. Interest rates moved significantly throughout the third quarter, including a rally in the 10-year treasury yield to just under 3.6%, that opened up a brief window for consumers seeking to refinance, a dynamic we haven’t seen in meaningful size since early 2022. Refinance activity represented 27% of our overall flow volume during the third quarter, more than double our recent run rate, with rates now almost 70 basis points higher than prior to September’s FOMC announcement, refinance demand has ebbed, but the volume increase is evidence that homeowners and originators are prepared to transact once a more durable reprieve eventually emerges. The level of activity also serves as a good reminder that 10% of outstanding mortgages are 100 basis points or less out of the money, a potential boon to market activity into a traditional seasonal slowdown in the fourth quarter. We completed three Sequoia securitizations during the third quarter for $1.5 billion, maintaining a reliable monthly cadence that promotes strong execution levels, a measure of contrast with other market participants that issue more episodically. But our issuance pace also has an important impact on our capital efficiency, particularly critical amidst what until recently has been a persistently inverted yield curve. Average days on balance sheet has decreased approximately 40% since 2023 to just under 40 days, freeing up capital for accretive alternative use, including hedging activities that drove significant outperformance during the third quarter. As Chris referenced, this momentum has continued into October. Our Residential Investor business built on its progress from the second quarter, sustaining overall production volume and executing on key distribution channels. We funded $458 million of investor loans during the third quarter, highlighted by another record quarter of Single Asset Bridge or SAB originations and growth in bridge lines of credit, which offer borrowers ongoing funding capacity on a cross collateralized basis. Term loan volumes in the quarter were impacted by sponsors taking a wait and see approach to the September Fed decision. With that now behind us, we’ve maintained a robust term loan funnel through a combination of new borrowers and opportunities within our existing portfolio. Of note, 75% of second quarter term loan volume was either a purchase transaction or a refinance from outside our book, reflecting the strength of our lead generation and the potential growth impact of organic refinance activity. During the third quarter, we also made critical strides in running the residential investor business in a capital efficient manner. Q3 was our first full quarter of operations with the CPP Investments joint venture, a partnership that allows us to capitalize more fully on a broadening set of products. Through October, we have contributed nearly $650 million of loans to our JVs. Volume we expect to steadily ramp in conjunction with other emerging distribution outlets. Chief among these is whole loan sales. And already in the fourth quarter, we have agreed to sell a $200 million plus pool of term loans to an institutional investor on the follow from our successful settlement of a $240 million term loan pool earlier this year. Taken together, this strategic progress in distribution gives the business differentiated alternatives to securitization while also reinforcing our positioning within the private capital ecosystem. The market’s largest asset allocators are increasingly looking to Redwood for scalable investment partnerships. Through time, this will have important benefits for shareholders, including a growing and durable revenue stream and the ability to serve even more facets of the market. Within the residential investor portfolio, overall repayment velocity increased by 19% from the second quarter, with close to $380 million of total payoffs, including over $225 million in the bridge book. Delinquencies increased approximately 1% from the second quarter as resolutions were offset by a small number of loans entering delinquent status. While the process of resolving certain of these loans often isn’t a straight line. Successful execution will free up valuable capital for redeployment. Through the work of our asset management team, we have visibility on resolving close to half of the delinquent bridge portfolio by the end of the year or early in Q1 2025 at anticipated loss severities favorable to the net discount at which the overall bridge portfolio is currently marked. Credit quality within our broader investment portfolio has remained strong. Performance of our jumbo and seasoned reperforming loan securities continue to exceed expectations supported by high levels of equity in the underlying loans. As Brooke will describe in more detail, our portfolio maintains a meaningful discount to par that we have begun to unlock through accretive secured financings and that represents a potentially meaningful tailwind for shareholders with continued strong credit performance and a durable change in the rate cycle. And with that I will turn the call over to Brooke to discuss our financial performance during the third quarter.