Thank you, Chris. I'll begin my commentary with our investment portfolio. We were active in deploying capital during the quarter investing in both assets created by our operating businesses and those source from third parties, excluding our share repurchase and the completion of the acquisition of Riverbend Lending, we deploy over $160 million into new investments during the quarter, primarily into CoreVest originated bridge loans and incremental growth in our home equity investment portfolio or AGI. Strong fundamental performance from these two asset classes drove an attractive adjusted return on capital for our portfolio. Given our strong capital position, we intend to continue assessing the market and making opportunistic investments where we see appropriate relative value. While price action during the quarter drove unrealized fair value losses in our investment portfolio. Underlying credit performance is strong and the credit quality and seasoning of our portfolio remain points worth emphasizing. Delinquencies in our books are at or near post pandemic lows, and loan resolutions continue to yield favorable outcomes versus modeled expectations. Even as home price appreciation begins to temper, our overall portfolio remains enhanced by record amounts of home equity. And in the case of our single-family rental portfolio, substantial rent growth. At Jun 30, 90 Plus day delinquencies within our jumbo, SFR and bridge portfolios stood at 1.7%, 2.4% and 2.6%, respectively. And we estimate current loan to values on loans underpinning our jumbo and RPLs securitizations to now be around 45%. As expected, with a substantial backup and rates pre payments within our consumer residential books slowed and while we expect near term call activity to be muted, continued pay downs bring us closer to unlocking the embedded value in this portion of the portfolio. Prepayment speeds within our securitize, SFR portfolio slowed modestly but remained elevated versus expectations, reflecting continued momentum in transactions for stabilized single-family real estate and bringing handful of more season capital transactions closer to callability. Within residential mortgage banking, while historically challenging quarter for jumbo mortgage prices impacted results. Our active hedging and discipline around distribution mitigated much of the price action and leaves us today with historically light levels of inventory and the opportunity to lean back in once market stabilize. During a period when most competitors were challenged to move risk, the team distributed $1.2 billion of Home Loans all through loan sales and at level significantly accretive to securitization, where execution continues to be hindered by the overhang of lower coupon pipelines. We purchased $1.1 billion of loans during the quarter and locked $1 billion of loans, compared to $2.6 billion in Q1. Over 80% of which were for purchase money transactions. This quarter-over-quarter decline in volume reflected our view of the market and we believe managed our mortgage banking results to a more favorable outcome than benchmark performance would imply, given the during the quarter we estimate jumbo spreads underperformed agency mortgages by approximately 100 basis points in spread. While we are not immune to this price action, we entered Q3 with an unallocated pipeline of $751 million, down 44% from March 31 2022, in which carried an average coupon above 5%. As many peers continue their retrenchment, our current risk position provides ample dry powder to assertively lean back in when conditions warrant. This could manifest itself in several ways including impacts from certain depositories repositioning around risk weighted asset challenges, or other market participants finally forced to part with lower coupon inventory. The recent pullback has also left Redwood as one of the strongest hands focused on responsibly underwritten expanded prime loans, an area in which we are continuing to make inroads with loan buyers prioritizing the quality of their partners. Spread widening also impacted our business purpose mortgage bank results. But the diversity of our product suite particularly the ability to manufacture short duration floating rate bridge loans, allowed us to continue serving borrowers accretively during the second quarter. We were excited to begin July with the close of our previously announced acquisition of Riverbend, a leading bridge lender with a broad origination footprint. As we mentioned at the time of the initial announcement, we view this acquisition as highly complementary to our existing core CoreVest platform and are excited to welcome the Riverbend team and of the family. Nearly a month in, we are already seeing the benefits of their client reach, including as a logical audience for CoreVest core products. As this acquisition did not close until the beginning of the third quarter, Riverbend’s results are not included in the performance metrics I will now cover. Volumes and business purpose lending were flat versus Q1, with a continued trend towards increased bridge production, which represented 60% of the quarter’s $923 million of fundings. SFR production declined quarter-over-quarter as spreads widen and benchmark rates rose, causing many borrowers to opt for shorter duration loans with more prepayment flexibility. We remain very constructive on our bridge production mix and no small part due to the quality of our sponsors and consistency and demand as rates of reset higher. As noted, bridge loans representative meaningful amount of our capital deployment in Q2 and our bridge book overall delivered a high teens cash on cash return during the quarter. CoreVest successfully issue two securitizations backed by $560 million of loans during the quarter, creating important additional capacity for the forward pipeline. We priced the $250 million bridge securitization in May, placing unrated bonds at a blended yield of 5.64%. Similar to our first deal, the structure includes a 24-month revolving period that will allow us to replenish pre payments but what are now meaningfully higher coupon loans going forward. Our $550 million of total bridge securitization capacity is an important subset of the $2.8 billion of total financing capacity for business purpose lending loans. Business purpose lending capped the quarter in late June by completing a $313 million capital securitization backed by SFR loans. The deal price wider than our prior issuance in Q4 2021. But we were able to issue bonds accretively down the capital structure that many other issues in the market were not. We were also able to recapture some of the spread widening through a new pricing methodology that gives us credit for expected prepayments on the underlying portfolio, no small achievement in a challenging market. I’ll round out my comments with an update on RWT Horizons. We made three new investments during the quarter bringing our total number of portfolio companies to 21. We have invested roughly $25 million of capital into the ventures thus far and are pleased to see continued maturation of our investments as well as growing strategic partnerships between Redwood and our Horizons’ portfolio companies. Several portfolio companies are in the process of raising additional growth capital and we are evaluating the opportunity to invest incrementally. It has been rewarding to see more synergies emerge through Horizons including liquid mortgages role as distributed ledger agent on our most recent capital deal, a first for that asset class. Horizons remains highly selective in its approach to new investments. And as always, we are focused on early stage ventures with meaningful strategic relevance to our business. We're optimistic that current market conditions are coinciding well with where Horizons is and its own evolution, as a network effect provides us access to situations we may not have seen as recently as six months ago. With that, I'll turn the call over to Brooke Carillo, Redwood’s Chief Financial Officer to go into more detail on our second quarter financial results.