Thank you, William. Our portfolio performed well in the first quarter with both components of our strategy contributing to the positive return. At year end, we commented that mortgage spread volatility would decline and that indeed was the case in Q1, helping to drive our positive hedged RMBS return. Our MSR performance was bolstered not only by slower than expected speed, but also a slight tightening of spreads indicative of the demand for the asset. Jumping back into the deck, please turn to Slide 9. Our portfolio at March 31 was $14.6 billion including $11.6 billion in settled positions and $3 billion in TBAs. Our economic debt to equity decreased to 6.2 times. We manage our exposure to rates across the curve very closely. In the first quarter, we lowered our risk to mortgage spreads and interest rate, as you can see in figures two and three. At quarter end, we had substantially less risk than when we started the quarter. Overall, we decreased our mortgage exposure by 30% and reduced our leverage. You can see more detail on our risk exposures on appendix Slide 18. Please turn to Slide 10. The performance of Agency RMBS securities was net positive over the quarter. RMBS outperformed interest rate hedges in January and February, but underperformed in March as equities and fixed income spread products weakened. Performance across the RMBS coupon stack was uneven with higher coupons both in TBAs and specified pools outperforming longer duration lower coupons. As you can see in Figure 1, our preferred implied volatility gauge to your options on 10-year rates decreased modestly from 101 to 98 basis points on an annualized basis. Both nominal spread and OAS tightened slightly, and these metrics, as well as the 2-year and 10-year implied volatility finished the quarter close to their 6- and 12-month averages. As has been the case, nominal spreads and volatility remain well above longer term averages, but option adjusted spreads are close to their long-term average. For this reason, we continue to believe that volatility will need to decline for RMBS spreads to materially tighten to treasuries. Of course, we have seen the opposite as implied and realized volatility has increased in the second quarter given the uncertainty around the macroeconomic outlook. Spreads for Agency RMBS have widened and spread volatility itself has increased to pre-election levels. Please turn to Slide 11 to review our Agency RMBS portfolio. Figure 1 shows the performance of TBAs compared to the specified pools we own throughout this quarter. The bull steepening of the swap curve plus strong levels of CMO issuance led to the outperformance of higher coupon RMBS. In terms of coupon stack activity, we started the quarter with an up in coupon bias, while progressively lowering our risk throughout the quarter. We reduced our exposure in 3% to 4.5% season specified pools by approximately $730 million and simultaneously added about $1.7 billion of 6.5% specified pools, while correspondingly reducing our net TBA position. To maintain our MSR current coupon hedging, we moved our MSR duration related TBA position down in coupon by selling 6s and buying 5s. Primary mortgage rates hovered around 7% for most of the quarter. With winter seasonal at play, prepayment activity was muted. Overall, prepayment rates for the 30-year Agency RMBS universe decreased by 1.4 percentage points quarter over quarter to 5.6% CPR. Figure 2 on the bottom right shows our specified pool prepayment speeds by coupon. Most of the decline in speeds quarter-over-quarter came from higher coupon slowing down. Please turn to Slide 12 as we discuss the market for investing in MSR. The MSR market remains well supported given the high demand for the asset class and limited bulk acquisition opportunities. As you can see in Figure 1, transfer volume appears to have normalized to pre-COVID levels. Borrowers remain as locked in as ever, happy with their low rates. With a current mortgage rate around 6.75%, less than 1% of the UPB of our portfolio has 50 basis points or more of a rate incentive to refinance. As you can see in Figure 2, prepays have remained low and steady and below our projections for the majority of our portfolio with only a five and above slightly increasing. The slow and steady nature of realized prepayment speeds, however, belies a very interesting characteristic of the structure of the market and of the nature of lock in. In particular, looking at the blue line, we do not see prepayment speeds asymptotically approaching some base turnover level of payoffs. Historical 12-month prepayment rates for 2.5s are faster than for 2s by about 1.2 CPR and faster for 3s than for 2.5s by about 0.5 CPR. This shows that even from mortgages that are very deeply out of the money, there is still rate sensitivity to the prepayment function. This has pricing implications for low coupon MSR and explains why the lowest note rate MSR has been able to trade at historically high multiples. Please turn to Slide 13, where we will discuss our MSR portfolio. Figure 1 is an overview of the portfolio at quarter end, further details of which can be found in appendix Slide 24. In April, we committed to purchase $1.7 billion UPB of MSR through two bulk purchases, which are expected to settle in the second quarter. Price multiple of our MSR was unchanged quarter over quarter at 5.9 times and 60 plus day delinquencies remained low at under 1%. Figure 2 compares CPRs across those implied security coupons in our portfolio of MSR versus TBAs. The prepayment speed of our MSR portfolio was 4.2 CPR for the first quarter, down 0.7% quarter over quarter. Please turn to Slide 14, our return potential and outlook slide. As you can see on this slide, the top half of this table is meant to show what returns we believe are available on the assets in our portfolio. We estimate that about 65% of our capital is allocated to servicing with a static return potential of 12% to 14%. The remaining capital is allocated to securities with a static return estimate of 10% to 15%. With our portfolio allocation shown in the top half of the table and after expenses, the static return estimate for our portfolio is between 8.7% to 12.3% 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 9.1% to 14.7% or a prospective quarterly static return per share of $0.33 to $0.54. Remember, these numbers reflect our portfolio and spreads at quarter end and would be higher today given that spreads are wider. We made a small update to this table this quarter by expanding the factors that we vary and determining the range of prospective static returns per basic common share. Previously, we had determined the range by varying prepayment rates and funding rates. Today, in addition, we have chosen to vary portfolio leverage rather than only using the spot value, keeping in mind that this slide is meant to be a medium-term estimate of return potential. Post quarter end dramatic shifts on tariff policies have triggered speculation on broad global asset allocation shifts away from dollar-based assets and heightened concerns about the effects of stagflation on Fed policy. Predictably, equity and fixed income volatility have spiked. Since April 2, the 10-year treasury yield has traded in a whopping 70 basis point range and the yield curve between 2- and 10-year treasuries has steepened by about 20 basis points. Swap spreads also fell precipitously to all time tight before widening back. While recent talk of tariff walk-backs have to some degree calmed the market, there still remains a large amount of economic uncertainty, all but guaranteeing a continued bumpy road ahead. But from dislocation, there is also opportunity. Volatility will continue to be a headwind we manage our portfolio for the long term. Being mindful of the current environment, we are keeping our portfolio leverage and risk at muted levels until there is more clarity on the economic path forward. However, we continue to see attractive levered returns on Agency RMBS and our portfolio of low-weighted average mortgage rate MSR should continue to generate stable cash flows over a wide range of interest rate scenarios. Thank you very much for joining us today. And now, we will be happy to take any questions you might have.