Thanks, Gregg. Before I go into the detailed financials and following up on Gregg's comments, I would like to frame up our current performance and how it aligns with our longer-term outlook. First, the company's long-term demand remains strong. We achieved another $2.8 billion of design-ins, our second highest quarter ever. Customers who have visited our new state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities and tested and used our products and compared them to rival products continue to choose Wolfspeed as their key supplier across both EV and industrial and energy device applications. In recent months, in materials, key customers such as Infineon in Rome have come back to Wolfspeed for expansion of multi-year, 150 millimeter wafer supply agreements. In addition, last year, after surveying the materials landscape, Renesas selected Wolfspeed for a 10-year supply agreement, including 200 millimeter substrates that included a $2 billion capacity reservation deposit, what we believe is the largest CRD in the history of semiconductors. Secondly, our operating execution has significantly improved during the last 12 months. One year ago, we delivered a revised ramp schedule for 200 millimeter wafer production out of our Durham campus and Mohawk Valley. Since then, we have achieved every one of those announced milestones, which will culminate in 20% utilization in June 2024. We have also had best-in-class performance from our materials operation, generating revenue at or above our guidance in that timeframe, including $99 million this past quarter, our second highest quarter ever. Let me walk through a few facts related to our 200 millimeter ramp. Die cost from our 200 millimeter substrates at Mohawk Valley, even including the full burden of Mohawk Valley fab underutilization, which was $30.4 million in Q3 is now lower than that of the same product produced out of our Durham fab at 150 millimeter. We expect this cost reduction to accelerate as we continue to ramp the fab. The Mohawk Valley device unit cost performance has been driven by breakthroughs in both yields and cycle times that we are continuing to see improve as we transition into the current quarter. Next, the MOSFET continue to have very strong qualification success in Mohawk Valley. And our back end testing and packaging operation has performed very well with no substantial issues and continues to perform well at higher levels of utilization. Please keep in mind, these results are in a new material substrate in a new fab at a new diameter with tools seeing this technology for the very first time. In addition, this was achieved as we completed the sale of our RF business last year, the third carve out divestiture in the last five years that has transformed our business and will allow us to remain focused on executing in our capacity ramps in both power devices and materials. Our team is executing very well. Next, we remain sharply focused on optimizing our funding and capital allocation strategy. And with our current financing facilities and finance partners, we expect to maintain a cash position greater than $1 billion for the foreseeable future. From a financing perspective, we have delivered on our plan. In November 2022, we told you we wanted to raise between $4 billion and $5 billion over the next few years. Eight months later, we had executed on $5 billion of low dilution funding from a combination of public markets, private markets, customers and governments. This allowed us to end March quarter with over $2.5 billion of cash and liquidity on the balance sheet. Including the final draw of our Renesas customer deposit, we now anticipate ending fiscal 2024 with approximately $2.2 billion to $2.4 billion of cash from liquidity. Looking at CapEx, we expect to spend approximately $2 billion in fiscal 2024, our peak year, consistent with the guidance we communicated last year. This includes $2.2 billion of gross CapEx, offset by approximately $200 million of government incentives in fiscal 2024. In fiscal 2025, we expect a substantial reduction in gross CapEx of about $600 million to $800 million, resulting in approximately $1.4 billion to $1.6 billion of gross CapEx. This CapEx is primarily focused on The JP and Mohawk Valley and does not include any CapEx for a new greenfield facility. We will not begin another greenfield facility expansion until we have achieved our cash flow objectives from our facilities in the US. Government funding meets our minimum requirements and liquidity and financing plans are clearly in place. The $1.4 billion to $1.6 billion of fiscal 2025 CapEx also does not include potential government incentives, grants and subsidies that would further lower this CapEx number and potentially be received within fiscal 2025. We continue to work with the CHIPS program office and this remains a key focus. To-date, our interactions with the CHIPS office have been very constructive and we look forward to completing our work with them in the near future. Depending on the timing of when these incentive payments are approved and then funded, it will be very important for the company to maintain flexibility on the financing front. This may include some interim financing under current financing facilities or otherwise that would allow us to enhance our balance sheet and cash position as we proceed with the Siler City construction and add more tools in the Mohawk Valley fab. To be clear, as Greg stated earlier, we do not anticipate that interim financing should we decide to execute it, to be dilutive or lock us into a disadvantageous capital structure. In addition, we expect the initial phase of The JP facility to be largely complete by the end of calendar 2024, closing out the vast majority of our fixed facility spend. At that point, our CapEx will be much more flexible and variable as we will be able to modulate how we invest in tools capacity to match our demand outlook. From a business performance standpoint, we are targeting to achieve positive EBITDA exiting fiscal year 2025 and operating cash flow breakeven shortly after that. Given that outlook and the number of liquidity options at our disposal, we expect to maintain a minimum cash balance greater than $1 billion for the foreseeable future and we will continue to evaluate that need as we complete our US facility expansion plan and transition to positive EBITDA and operating cash flow. Looking ahead, we believe the current US capacity expansions can generate approximately $3 billion in annual revenue with greater than 40% EBITDA margins. We remain confident in our long range financial targets as the underlying economics we are seeing so far from Mohawk Valley and Building 10 demonstrate that our purpose built vertically integrated greenfield approach to capacity expansion will generate strong revenue and profitability. In combination with The JP, Mohawk Valley will be able to produce more than $2 billion of device revenue in addition to the $400 million of device capacity currently installed in our Durham device fab. In addition, with The JP online, we have the potential to grow the material substrate business to greater than $600 million. Lastly, short-term revenue and gross margins are being impacted by slower industrial and energy markets. In the short-term, we are pivoting our available capacity to EV products where EV product demand continues to outstrip our available capacity to serve that demand. The outcome of this will be more muted revenue growth and low gross margin for the next few quarters, but as Gregg mentioned earlier, it positions us for any potential recovery in I&E. Most importantly, it does not impact our longer term plans to achieve our revenue and EBITDA targets. We believe that it will be at least the second half of this calendar year before we see inventory levels return to normal. But as we said last quarter, much of the product we had already produced and slated to ship has a match elsewhere in our pipeline and we are continuing to work to find the best match for that inventory now. I would now like to shift to our quarterly performance. As a reminder, before we discuss Q3 performance, all results reported today will be in a continuing operations basis and exclude the impact of our divested RF business in our results. We generated $201 million of revenue for the quarter, a decline of 4% sequentially and increase of 4% year-over-year. We generated power revenue of $102 million. These results were largely driven by the $28 million of revenue contribution from Mohawk Valley and offset by persistent weakness in our industrial and energy markets, particularly across Asia. We continue to see growth from our EV customers as EV device revenue increased approximately 48% year-over-year. As I mentioned earlier, we posted materials revenue of $99 million, our second highest quarter ever. This strong performance was driven by better-than-expected yields and output on 150 millimeter wafers. Non-GAAP gross margin in the third quarter was 15%. As I mentioned previously, unit costs at Mohawk Valley continued to improve, driven by increasing yields and lower cycle times as we ramp the fab. However, in the short-term, as demand shifts away from I&E, we will see an impact on revenue and gross margin. We will shift as much production capacity as possible to EV products in the near-term with the same underlying production will not generate the equivalent revenue or gross margin results. We anticipate this to be the case until we start to see a recovery in I&E markets in the first half of calendar year 2025. This does not, however, change our view that I&E products will be a substantial and important part of our product portfolio and capacity investment over the longer term. Our adjusted EPS of negative $0.62 was just above the midpoint of our guidance. Our EPS, in addition to the underutilization costs mentioned above, also included the impact of $14.4 million of factory start-up costs related to the construction of The JP and our materials expansion efforts. Now on to our balance sheet. We ended the quarter with over $2.5 billion of cash and liquidity on hand to support our facility ramps and growth plans. DSO was 36 days while inventory on hand was 213 days. Free cash flow during the quarter was negative $616 million, comprised of negative $136 million of operating cash flow and $480 million of capital expenditures. Moving on to our guidance, in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024, we expect revenue from continuing operations of $185 million to $215 million. To give a bit more of a specific breakdown on our revenue expectations for the fourth quarter, we expect materials to be approximately $90 million to $95 million consistent with our prior outlook. Mohawk Valley to contribute $40 million to $50 million of revenue in the quarter, up more than 60% from prior quarter at the midpoint and revenue contribution from power devices in our Durham fab to be down to approximately $55 million to $70 million, down from $106 million in the prior year period. Also embedded in our guidance is a significant shift of our product mix in Durham from I&E to EV, as I mentioned earlier. As Gregg mentioned earlier, we had a strong quarter in Mohawk Valley and we have a clear trajectory towards 20% utilization at Mohawk Valley by the fiscal year end. However, as we stated previously, that does not entail a 20% revenue contribution in the June quarter due to the time needed to run through our full production cycle. We expect non-GAAP gross margins of 8% to 16% with a midpoint of 12%. At the midpoint, this includes $29 million or 1,450 basis points of underutilization. We expect non-GAAP operating expenses of approximately $119 million inclusive of $20 million of startup costs related to The JP. As a reminder, as Mohawk Valley fab utilization increases and The JP starts to come online, we will start to see incrementally less underutilization, but incrementally more startup costs which hit different lines of our P&L. The net non-operating expenses will be roughly $34 million for the fourth quarter, and as a result, we expect non-GAAP net loss between $109 million and $91 million. Before I turn it back to Gregg for closing comments, I'd like to highlight again that our plan to be a leading provider of silicon carbide solutions to the market is on track and gaining velocity. We believe this because long-term demand remains robust. Operating execution is improving. Our balance sheet remains strong supported by a multifaceted financing plan and we expect to maintain a cash position of greater than $1 billion. The US capacity expansion can generate strong financial returns and pivoting to more EV device production now positions the company for future I&E recovery. Gregg, I'll hand it back over to you.