Thank you, Mary. Please turn to Slide 10. Over the third quarter, the correlation of higher rates, higher, volatility, and wider mortgage spreads remained in place. Nevertheless, the active management of our agency coupon positioning and our exposure to MSR, coupled with disciplined re-hedging of our interest rate risk as yields rose, protected the portfolio and resulted in less of an impact to our book value. Let's look at figure one, mortgage spreads performed well in July as rates and volatility remained stable. Only they weakened during the months of August and September, as the yield of the 10-year treasury notched its highest level in over a decade. For the current coupon the nominal spreads of treasuries widened by 11 basis points over the quarter to 151 basis points, while the OAS increased 48 basis points, only wider by four basis points, given the concurrent increase in volatility. At these levels, spreads remain very wide historically with a nominal current coupon spread, well, above the 90th percentile of long-term history. In a nearer term context, spreads finished the quarter much closer to their averages since the beginning of June, a period that is mostly passed the distortions of the banking crisis and raising the debt ceiling in the second quarter. Focusing solely on the current coupon does not reveal the underperformance of lower coupons for the quarter, most of which took place during the later half of September as longer end rates shot higher. What made us particularly interesting is that the FDIC successfully completed their sales of lower coupon MBS like two and a halves by early August, at which point the bonds had recovered almost all the widening that occurred since the banking crisis was touched off in March. Call it guilt by association, but given the rise in rates and steepening of the yield curve, there was clearly no love for longer duration bonds, and lower coupons at the longest duration RMBS. Figure two shows quarter-over-quarter spread curves in nominal and option adjusted terms. It's evident how much the lower coupons underperformed by seeing the curve flattening from one quarter to the next, particularly, when focusing on option-adjusted spreads. As is expected, when coupons go up so do spreads, compensating the investor for a greater degree of repayment risk. As you can see, the nominal curve in blue is still downward sloping, but less so than last quarter, but the higher coupons close to unchanged and the lowers moving higher. The option-adjusted curve at quarter end was remarkably flat, especially considering the dramatic range of Morgan coupons available in the market and their inherently different risks. Now let's turn to Slide 11 and discuss our portfolio positioning and activity in the third quarter. At September 30th, our portfolio was $14.1 billion, including $12 billion of settled positions. On the top right of the slide, you can see a few bullets about our risk positioning and leverage. Our quarter end economic debt-to-equity was 6.3 times. Against the backdrop of continued elevated rate and spread volatility, we think it is prudent to maintain a neutral leverage position. Importantly, we don't need to add more leverage to generate strong returns, as you will see in a few slides when we detail our return outlook. We kept our book value exposure to changes in rates low, but maintained a short duration bias given the propensity for MBS to widen as rates increase, particularly to long-end rates making new highs. You can see more detail on our risk positioning by looking at slides 16, 17, 28 and 29 in the appendix. On the bottom right of this slide, we've highlighted our portfolio activity in the quarter for both agencies and MSR, which we will address in detail in the following slides. Please turn to Slide 12 to review our agency portfolio. Figure one shows the composition of our specified pool holdings by coupon and story and then figure two you can see the performance of TBAs and the specified pools we own throughout the quarter. Through the entire stack underperformed, on a relative basis, we benefited from having a concentrated exposure to the upper belly coupons like 4.5s and 5s. These coupons outperformed primarily due to two factors, demand for money managers that have previously been focused on lower coupons from FDIC sales and diminished supply, as mortgage rates, moved higher pushing them fully out of the production window. Specified pools also outperformed TBAs. Roles generally traded below carry making specified pools of better choice, particularly with semi-season pools that prepaid particularly well during the summer months. We actually managed our positioning in the quarter, strategically moving our exposure within the coupon stack, as well as rotating some TBA exposure to specified pools. Most notably, we moved close to two billion of our TBA 5 position, predominantly up in coupon to sixes and six and a halves. The rotation was driven by several factors, including strong performance in the quarter by the upper belly coupons as we already discussed, the natural need to reset our current coupon hedged against our MSRs rates sold off. And our belief that into a higher for longer environment, higher coupon should outperform. Figure three on the bottom right shows our specified pool prepayment speeds, which were 6.7% CPR in the third quarter, increasing modestly from the second quarter. Given that our pool position is concentrated in discount bonds, faster, speeds are beneficial to our performance. As you can see from the chart, on aggregate speeds on these pools were materially faster than TBAs, hence providing more returns. Please turn to Slide 13. Our MSR portfolio was $3.2 billion in market value at September 30th. This was down slightly from June 30th because of the conversion of approximately 1.2 basis points of MSR to IO securities, reducing the net servicing fee on MSR to 25.2 basis points. We did not buy any MSR through bulk purchases in the quarter, but did add $472 million through float purchases and recapture. Speeds on our MSR holdings paid 4.9% CPR declining 9.3% from the prior quarter. Over 60% of our MSR have a weighted average loan age of 20 to 40 months and those had a CPR of only 4.3%. We expect prepayment rates to fall again in the fourth quarter, reflecting weaker seasonal factors, and the rise in primary rates. With the weighted average mortgage rate of our MSR close to 400 basis points lower than today's rates, prepayment speed should remain historically slow. Finally, please turn to Slide 14, our return potential outlook slide. The top half of this table is meant to show what returns we believe are available in the market. We estimate that about 62% of our capital is allocated to hedged MSR with a market static return projection of 12% to 14%. The remaining capital is allocated to hedged RMBS with a static return wstimate of 15% to 16%. The lower section of this slide is specific to our portfolio with a focus on common equity and estimated returns per common share. Note, that with the closing of the Roundpoint acquisition, we have added an aftertax benefit of 80 to 100 basis points of return to this section of the outlook. With our portfolio allocation shown in the top half of the table and after expenses, the static return estimate for our portfolio is between 10.4% to 12.9% before applying any capital structure leverage to the portfolio. After giving effect to our outstanding convertible notes and preferred stock, we believe that the potential static return on common equity falls in the range of 12.3% to 16.3% or a prospective quarterly static return per share of $0.47 to $0.62. Circling back to my earlier comments, there is no need to employ more leverage without return potential in this range. Our active management of our agency coupon positioning, our exposure to MSR and our disciplined risk management benefited returns to this quarter and protected the portfolio of additional downside. While rate and spread volatility can pose near-term challenges to the RMBS sector, with our capital, allocation and current spreads for MBS and MSR, we believe this is a very attractive time to invest in our assets. Thank you very much for joining us today. And now, we will be happy to take any questions you may have.