Thank you, Chris. I'll cover our operating results before handing the call over to Brooke to conclude with our financial highlights. Sequoia's first quarter performance underscores the significant runway for the business even amidst the continued period of relatively tepid housing activity. While money center banks reported steep mortgage volume declines of between 20% to 30%, Sequoia's $4 billion of first quarter locks represented 73% quarter-on-quarter growth. The source of the momentum is twofold: continued wallet share growth across our seller base for on-the-run production and the long-awaited emergence of seasoned bulk portfolios, primarily from banks as a viable expansion of our funnel. Combined with an outlook for distribution that once again includes certain depositories seeking to bolster loan growth with third-party mortgage portfolios, this primes the business to grow market share even while prudently navigating the recent macro volatility. With a network of over 200 sellers, we are actively engaged with originators that represent close to 75% of overall jumbo originations. This includes several top 20 banks and a deep group of independent mortgage bankers, or IMBs, who are benefiting from many depositories deemphasizing mortgage lending. First quarter volume was split evenly between banks and IMBs and notably, included a $1 billion portfolio of seasoned 30-year and hybrid production acquired from a large depository, our second large portfolio acquisition from a bank in the past 3 quarters. Even net of this important transaction, we estimate our market share of on-the-run jumbo production to be between 6% and 7%, up from 4% to 5% in 2024 and from the platform's long-term average of approximately 2%. As our product offerings deepen and more banks prioritize distribution over balance sheet retention, we expect this footprint to continue growing. Efficient distribution drove another quarter of Sequoia gain on sale margins well above our historical targets. Sequoia distributed $2.5 billion of loans during the first quarter through 3 securitizations and several bulk whole loan sales. Notably, the majority of our whole loan distribution was to banks seeking to bolster overall loan growth, reflecting an emerging 2 way flow between bank sellers and bank buyers that we're well positioned to continue facilitating. Amidst April's unprecedented market fluctuations, we continue to defend margins, executing our fourth securitization of the year earlier this week while carefully managing pipeline and hedging risk to position us favorably into the second half of Q2 and beyond. A core complement to Sequoia's growth is the expansion of our Aspire platform which now includes both directly originated home equity investments or HEI and expanded loan products acquired from third parties, many of them existing sellers. While loan acquisition volume for the first quarter was just over $100 million, the platform has now locked loans with 25 discrete sellers and remains active in onboarding new origination partners. Inflows are being efficiently distributed and we have sold Aspire pools to 2 different end investors with several others actively engaged in acquiring loans from the platform. While Aspire loans serve consumers requiring an alternative approach to underwriting income or other key attributes, the focus remains on high-quality borrowers with strong equity positions in their homes. Life-to-date, Aspire loan production has averaged 755 FICO and 68% LTV. Looking ahead, we expect to grow Aspire's volumes meaningfully in the second half of 2025 with a full-year share goal of 2% to 3% of an addressable market that continues to expand. Aspire is leveraging Sequoia's playbook of speed and reliability of execution to capture production from a growing base of sellers. This will be coupled with an important technology overlay to more effectively transform the experience for our loan sellers and the prospective homeowners they serve. By providing these innovations to both new origination partners and the sellers we've served for decades, our loan acquisition funnel could emerge over time as a distinct competitive advantage in the sector. CoreVest maintained its recent momentum in the first quarter, funding $482 million of loans, a 4% decrease from the fourth quarter but up 48% year-over-year. As the market landscape continues to evolve, our increased focus in recent quarters on smaller balanced loans backed by single-family homes, namely residential transition loans or RTL and DSCR loans, continues to serve the platform well. These 2 products comprised about 30% of CoreVest's first quarter volumes, a proportion we expect to grow throughout the remainder of the year. During the first quarter, 98% of our bridge volume was backed by single-family homes and we continue to expand the sourcing funnels for these strategies and see ongoing runway to gain share in conjunction with existing bellwether products like term loans, for which volume dipped slightly quarter-over-quarter given interest rate volatility but where we maintain a strong pipeline for Q2. CoreVest continues to execute on its capital-light strategy, prioritizing products in which the market sees value. The platform distributed over $400 million of loans during the first quarter, largely to whole loan buyers and our joint ventures and maintained an efficient working capital ratio while focusing on products prioritized by private credit investors. In the past year alone, CoreVest has distributed over $1.8 billion of loans into dedicated sources of capital, specifically joint ventures, whole loan sales and existing securitizations with revolving features. Overall credit strategy across our platforms reflects a more nuanced national housing landscape than we've seen in some time. While the U.S. remains structurally undersupplied in turnkey homes, both new and secondary inventory has grown in several markets as buyers face higher borrowing and maintenance costs. Though recent softness is modest relative to the appreciation of recent years, we're adjusting our production priorities in response to emerging local trends that we believe will allow us to meet our growth goals at attractive risk-adjusted returns. Within Redwood Investments, credit performance for organically retained and third-party assets, particularly ones with consumer-related strategies remains strong. We've talked before about the ability to unlock the discount from these investments which at quarter-end stood at $1.87 per share through relevering and other portfolio optimization and see a path towards achieving that in the coming quarters. Underlying repayment velocity in the bridge loan portfolio remains solid as we saw over 10% of the portfolio repaid in Q1. We continue to actively reduce exposure in the legacy bridge portfolio, specifically from the 2021 and 2022 vintage, prioritizing resolutions that optimize net present value, including traditional property liquidations and restructurings that better position a sponsor to refinance, as well as more recently pursuing partnership-based solutions with other capital providers in the space at both an asset-specific and portfolio level. At times, this value-driven approach may result in short-term increases in delinquencies as it did this quarter, largely tied to 2 sponsor relationships and still concentrated in the legacy multifamily bridge cohort we've previously discussed. Of note, during the first quarter, approximately 10% of loans that were 90-plus days delinquent at year-end were resolved, progress that has continued into the second quarter. We remain confident that this strategy is the most effective path to achieving successful outcomes and preserving value. Roughly half of this legacy multifamily portfolio has already been repaid and our net capital exposure to this cohort, net of recent resolution activity now sits at approximately $1.60 per share. Our post-2023 vintages, largely centered on single-family strategies continue to perform well and reflect the strength of our more recent investment focus. And with that, I will hand the call over to Brooke.