Thank you, Chris. The third quarter witnessed our strongest operating performance in the Company's history with ample progress in further reallocating capital to continue profitably scaling our core activities. To start, Sequoia launched $5.1 billion of loans in the third quarter, a 53% increase from Q2 and a record for the platform. Against a more muted market backdrop in which many other large players reported minimal to no production growth, our volumes with both bank and nonbank sellers grew by over 50%. We estimate that our seller network now covers approximately 80% of market share for jumbo production, up from 20% to 30% as recently as 2023. In step, our estimated jumbo market share is now 7%, up from 1% to 2% over the same time period. This deeper access must be complemented by crisp execution, a continued strength of our platform across a deepening set of products. Sequoia's third quarter activity was split between traditional 30-year fixed, hybrid ARMs, closed-end second liens and a number of other products, underscoring our role as a one-stop provider of timely and flexible liquidity for our loan origination partners. Of note, 48% of our third quarter volumes were bank collateral and 25% was tied to seasoned loans, reflective of trends we have anticipated for some time, namely a resurgence in bank M&A activity and increased rigor within bank C-suites in evaluating the true return profile of funding long-duration mortgages with deposits, irrespective of where the final Basel endgame rules land. By design, our operating progress has been coupled with continued momentum in distribution. Year-to-date, we have distributed nearly $9 billion of collateral tops in the market across 13 securitizations and whole loan sales to a variety of partners, including $2.6 billion in the third quarter. This already eclipses full year 2024 activity and with demand for securitization still elevated, notwithstanding a modest recent backup in overall execution. We expect activity to continue at pace heading into year-end. Complementing Sequoia's growth is our emergent Aspire platform, whose expanded loan program we launched in January of this year. This business primarily focuses on loans for prime quality borrowers who require an alternative underwriting approach, including a valuation of personal bank statements or rental income tied to the property. Aspire's $1.2 billion of third quarter locks were nearly 4x second quarter volume. The business closed the quarter with a record month, $550 million in September alone, profitably establishing a run rate we expect to build upon in the quarters ahead. The pipeline continues to reflect a focus on well-underwritten loans to high-quality borrowers with third quarter production carrying an average credit score of 749 and average LTV of 71%. Aspire's emergence as a top 5 aggregator of non-QM loans underscores both the institutional strength of our platform and sellers' growing preference to consolidate relationships as they expand their own product offerings. A key element of Aspire's business plan has already played out. Existing sellers are meaningfully broadening the range of products they deliver through the platform. As recently as 18 to 24 months ago, many of our core seller relationships were brokering out or otherwise not directly addressing the expanded credit market, which market observers estimate could be up 40% from a year ago and top $125 billion in size in 2025. The shift has been noticeable and bodes well for the expanded credit market overall and Aspire's growth prospects in particular. Sellers seeking seamless and one-stop solutions for their products can now come to Redwood for their entire suite of non-agency offerings. Concurrently, Aspire continues to make important inroads with relationships new to our platform, critical progress to grow the platform responsibly, diversifying our seller base and thereby driving reliable margins. The platform grew its loan originator partner base by nearly 50% in the third quarter with plans to continue growing further, including with several top originators in the coming quarters. While Aspire's distribution thus far has been focused on whole loan sales, we are in process to expand our distribution efforts further through securitization and joint ventures, outlets where we have had success in other channels of our business. Our residential investor loan platform, CoreVest, continued to evolve its production mix while achieving its highest quarterly volume since mid-2022. Notably, originations within CoreVest are increasingly driven by smaller balance products. Originations of residential transition loans or RTLs and DSCR comprised 40% of Q3 volume and are up 45% versus the same period last year. The smaller balance market remains a significant opportunity for CoreVest, given we have been relatively underpenetrated in a space that continues to grow and remains in demand with our capital partners. The broader origination landscape for investor loans remains robust but uneven as many platforms competitive posture, as always, ebbs and flows in step with their access to capital. Depth of distribution remains a competitive advantage for CoreVest, which has distributed nearly $1.5 billion of loans year-to-date via joint ventures and whole loan sales. Concurrent with our operating progress, we significantly reduced our exposure to legacy investments since the end of the second quarter. We sold our full reperforming loan portfolio, SLST, and approximately half of our third-party HEI investments at accretive levels versus our June 30, 2025 marks, while also resolving or transferring a significant portion of our legacy bridge loans, including selling over half of the portfolio into a partnership structure capitalized with multiyear nonrecourse borrowings with preferred and residual co-investments by a third party. Pro forma for these activities, legacy investments now represent approximately 25% of total capital, down from 33% at June 30, 2025, with further reductions expected through year-end, primarily through additional resolutions in the legacy bridge portfolio. I'll now turn the call over to Brooke to discuss our financial results.