Thanks, Brian, and good morning, everyone. Synchrony's third-quarter financial results were highlighted by continued strength in our credit performance and acceleration of our purchase volume trends, which was broad-based across our five sales platforms and all generations. We generated $46 billion of purchase line during the third quarter, which was up 2% year over year and continued to be affected by the credit actions we took between mid-2023 and early 2024 and continued selectivity in customer spend behavior. Ending loan receivables decreased 2% to $100 billion in the third quarter due to the combination of lower prior period purchase volume and average active accounts as well as higher payment rate. The payment rate increased by approximately 60 basis points versus last year to 16.3% and was approximately 120 basis points above the pre-pandemic third-quarter average. Net revenue of $3.8 billion was flat versus last year as higher net interest income was offset by higher RSAs driven by program performance. Our net interest income increased 2% to $4.7 billion reflecting a 14% decrease in interest expense, partially offset by a 16% lower interest income on investment securities. Our third-quarter net interest margin increased 58 basis points versus last year to 15.62. There are two key drivers of this net interest margin improvement: one, a 58 basis point decline in our total interest-bearing liabilities cost versus last year, which contributed approximately 49 basis points to our net interest margin and two, a 35 basis point increase in our loan receivables yield, which contributed approximately 29 basis points to our net interest margin. This increase was primarily driven by the impact of our product, pricing, and policy changes or PPPC's partially offset by lower benchmark rates and lower assessed late fees. These improvements were partially offset by another two key drivers of net interest margin. One, an 88 basis point reduction in our liquidity portfolio yield, which reduced our net interest margin by 14 basis points. The decline generally reflected the impact of lower benchmark rates. And two, a 35 basis point decrease in the mix of loan receivables as a percent of interest-earning assets, which reduced our net interest margin by approximately six basis points. Moving on. RSAs of $1 billion were 4.07% of average loan receivables in the third quarter and increased $110 million versus the prior year, primarily reflecting program performance, which included lower net charge-offs and the impact of our PPPC's. Other income increased 7% year over year to $127 million which included the impact of PPPC related fees. Provision for credit losses decreased $451 million to $1.1 billion driven by a $255 million decrease in net charge-offs and a reserve release of $152 million versus a build of $44 million in the prior year. The current year reserve release included the impact of a $45 million reserve build for the pending acquisition of the Lowe's commercial co-brand credit card portfolio, which is expected to close during 2026. Other expense increased 5% to $1.2 billion generally reflecting higher employee costs and costs related to technology investments, partially offset by preparatory expenses related to the proposed late fee rule change in the prior year. The third-quarter efficiency ratio was 32.6%, approximately 140 basis points higher than last year due to higher overall expenses and the impact of higher RSAs on net revenue as credit performance improved. Taken together, Synchrony generated net earnings of $1.1 billion or $2.86 per diluted share and delivered a return on average assets of 3.6, a return on tangible common equity of 30.6% and a 16% increase in tangible book value per share. Next, I'll cover our key credit trends on Slide eight. At quarter end, our 30 plus delinquency rate was 4.39%, a decrease of 39 basis points from 4.78% in the prior year and 23 basis points below our historical average for the 2017 to 2019. Our 90 plus delinquency rate was 2.12%, a decrease of 21 basis points from 2.33% in the prior year, in line with our historical average from the 2017 to 2019. And our net charge-off rate was 5.16% in the third quarter, a decrease of 90 basis points from the 6.06% in the prior year and seven basis points above our historical average for the 2019. Net charge-off dollars were down 8% sequentially. This compares favorably to the 2017 to 2019 average sequential dollar decline of 7%. When evaluating our credit performance, our portfolio delinquency and net charge-off trends reflect both the efficacy of our credit actions and the power of our disciplined underwriting and credit management strategies. These trends reinforce our confidence in our portfolio's credit positioning as we move forward and provide a strong foundation for us to execute our business strategy. Finally, our allowance for credit losses as a percent of loan receivables was 10.35%, which decreased approximately 24 basis points from 10.59% in the second quarter. Turning to Slide nine. Synchrony's funding, capital, and liquidity continue to provide a strong foundation for our business. During the third quarter, Synchrony's direct deposits remained sequentially flat as broker deposits declined by $2.4 billion. At quarter end, deposits represented 85% of our total funding with unsecured debt representing 7% and secured debt representing 8%. Total liquid assets decreased 7% to $18.2 billion and represented 15.6% of total assets, 94 basis points lower than last year. Moving to our capital ratios. Synchrony ended the third quarter with a CET1 ratio of 13.7%, 60 basis points higher than last year's 13.1%. Our Tier one capital ratio was 14.9%, 60 basis points higher than last year. Our total capital ratio increased 60 basis points to 17%. And our Tier one capital plus reserves ratio increased to 25.1% compared to 24.5% last year. During the third quarter, Synchrony returned $971 million to shareholders, consisting of $861 million in share repurchases and $110 million in common stock dividends. Recognizing the strength of our balance sheet, our strong capital generation capacity, and the resilience of our business from both our sophisticated underwriting and retailer share arrangements, Synchrony's Board approved an incremental $1 billion in share repurchases in September, bringing our total authorization to $2.1 billion at the end of the third quarter. Synchrony remains well-positioned to return capital to shareholders as guided by our business performance, market conditions, regulatory restrictions, and our capital plan. Turning to our outlook for 2025 on Slide 10. Our baseline assumptions for the full-year outlook continue to include minor modifications we made to our PPPC's this year as well as our September launch of our Walmart One Pay program. Exclude any potential impacts from a deteriorating macroeconomic environment or from the implementation of tariffs and potential retaliatory tariffs as the effects remain unknown. And now also included the acquisition of Versatile Credit, which is not expected to have a material impact on our 2025 financial performance. Focusing on our outlook in more detail. We continue to expect flat ending receivables versus last year, reflecting the ongoing impact of selective customer spend and the continued effect of our past credit actions on purchase volume and payment rate, the latter which remains elevated relative to our pre-pandemic average. While we made certain modifications to our credit strategy in the third quarter and expect to make further adjustments in the fourth quarter, we do not expect them to have a material effect on growth in 2025. While our past credit actions have contributed to higher payment rate and slower loan receivables growth over the short term, they have meaningfully strengthened our portfolio's credit performance. We now expect our loss rate to be between 5.6-5.7%, which is towards the lower end of our long-term underwriting target of 5.5% to 6%. The combination of higher payment rates and improved credit outlook is contributing to lower interest and fees, which is expected to reduce net interest income and result in RSAs between 3.95-4.05% of receivables and net revenue between $15 billion and $15.1 billion. We expect our net interest margin to increase and average approximately 15.7 for the full 2025, reflecting lower funding costs due to lower benchmark rates, partially offset by lower yielding investment portfolio and an increasing mix of loan receivables as a percent of earning assets driven by the impact of seasonal growth and a continued reduction of our excess liquidity. And lastly, we're updating our efficiency ratio expectation between 33-33.5%, primarily reflecting the updated net revenue outlook. We continue to expect other expenses to increase approximately 3% on a dollar basis for the full year, which includes the Walmart program launch costs. In summary, Synchrony's outlook for 2025 demonstrates the strength of our distinctive business model and delivers net interest margin expansion, stronger delinquency formation and net charge-offs, and continued performance alignment through the RSA. This will drive higher risk-adjusted return and return on average assets that exceeds our long-term target of 2.5%. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Brian.