Thank you, Marcel. Good morning, everyone. For the third quarter, our same-property portfolio revenue was $164.5 million, flat to the third quarter of 2024, based on occupancy of 66.3% at an average daily rate of $248.09. Strength in non-room spend, particularly banquet revenues, resulted in total RevPAR of $289.76 for the quarter and $329.60 for the year to date, an increase of 3.7% and 8.5% respectively when compared to the same period in 2024. Excluding Grand Hyatt Scottsdale, RevPAR was $167.87, a decrease of 2.6% as compared to 2024. This reflected a decrease of 289 basis points in occupancy for the period and an increase of 1.5% in average daily rate as compared to the third quarter of 2024. Our top-performing hotels for the quarter were Grand Hyatt Scottsdale with RevPAR up 27%, Andaz Savannah up 15.3%, Waldorf Astoria Atlanta Buckhead nearly 14%, Grand Bohemian Hotel Mountain Brook up 13.2%, Hyatt Regency Santa Clara up 12%, Renaissance Atlanta Waverly up 12.5%, Grand Bohemian Hotel Orlando nearly 9%, Bohemian Hotel Savannah Riverfront up 8.3%, and the Ritz-Carlton Pentagon City up nearly 6%. Strength in group business and continued improvement in corporate demand was the driver behind success in most of these properties. Hotels that experienced RevPAR weakness compared to 2024 included Loews New Orleans, all three Houston hotels, Marriott Dallas Downtown, Hyatt Centric Key West, and Kimpton Hotel Palomar Philadelphia. New Orleans suffered from a lack of convention center activity relative to last year, and the Houston hotels were challenged by a comparison to a significant amount of business related to Hurricane Barry that they captured last year. General leisure softness and the return of inventory that was offline last summer impacted us. Looking at each month of the quarter compared to 2024, July RevPAR was $161.98, down 1.7%. August RevPAR was $154.43, down 1.5%. And September RevPAR was $177.52, a 3% increase. Excluding Grand Hyatt Scottsdale, compared to last year, business declined in July and August, largely due to the weakness in the Houston market and softer leisure demand overall. Performance in September significantly improved as we got out of the leisure-heavy summer months and saw strong group business as well as a significant increase in corporate travel. Business from our largest corporate accounts was modestly down in Q3, with declines in both July and August, but saw an even increase in September as compared to Q3 of 2024. Business from the largest volume accounts continued to be down meaningfully from 2019, but has continued to grow throughout the year. Group business continues to be a bright spot across the portfolio despite the seasonal shift from corporate to association-related group, resulting in the lowest quarterly group growth for the year. In the third quarter, excluding Grand Hyatt Scottsdale, group room revenues were virtually flat compared to the third quarter of last year, due to modest declines in both July and August, while September was more in line with the trends we have seen throughout the year, approximately 5%. Food and beverage revenue from banquets declined slightly during the quarter compared to last year as a result of a mix of events. Now turning to expenses and profit. Third quarter same-property total revenue increased 3.8% compared to 2024. Hotel EBITDA margin decreased by 60 basis points, resulting in hotel EBITDA of nearly $47 million, an increase of 0.7%. For the year to date, hotel EBITDA increased 12.6% with margin improvement of 101 basis points compared to the same period in 2024. Since Grand Hyatt Scottsdale was undergoing its transformative renovation last year, the following P&L analysis is presented for the remainder of the same-property portfolio. Compared to last year, hotel EBITDA for the quarter was $46.7 million, a decrease of 7.8% on a total revenue decrease of 0.7%, resulting in a margin decline of 160 basis points. However, we are pleased with the ability of our hotel's management teams to control expenses in light of softer revenue. Rooms department expenses increased by 1.5% on a 2.6% decline in revenue. Food and beverage growth was muted at 0.4% with expense growth of 0.8%. Other operating department income, including spa, parking, and golf revenues, was up 6.6%. Miscellaneous income was up 7.8%, resulting in a total RevPAR decline of just 0.7%. In the undistributed department, expenses in A&G and sales and marketing were well controlled. A&G increased by 1.5% compared to last year, while sales and marketing expenses grew by 2%, continuing the moderating trend we have experienced over the past several quarters. Property operations and utilities expenses were up 2.6% and 0.5% respectively. Turning to CapEx, during the third quarter, we invested $19.9 million in portfolio improvements, which brings our total for the year to $70.7 million. These amounts are inclusive of capital expenditures related to the completion of the transformative renovation at Grand Hyatt Scottsdale. We completed improvements in the building facade and parking lot during the third quarter, which now mark the full completion of this transformational renovation. During the third quarter, we made significant progress on select upgrades to guest rooms at several properties, including Renaissance Plano Waverly, Marriott San Francisco Airport, Hyatt Centric Key West, Hyatt Regency Santa Clara, Grand Bohemian Hotel Mountain Brook, and Grand Bohemian Hotel Charleston. This work, which is expected to be substantially complete by year-end, is being done during periods of lower occupancy, particularly over the holiday season. We are continuing to make significant infrastructure upgrades at 10 hotels this year, including facade waterproofing, pillow replacements, elevator and escalator modernization projects, and fire alarm system upgrades. As business levels allow, the majority of this work will be completed in the fourth quarter or early 2026. In the fourth quarter, we will begin work on a limited guestroom renovation at Marriott Pittsburgh, which will be completed in the first quarter of 2026, and a renovation of the M Club at Marriott Dallas Downtown, which we expect to be completed in early 2026. During the third quarter, we entered into agreements with Jose Andres Group, also known as JAG, pursuant to which JAG will operate and/or license substantially all of the food and beverage outlets at W Nashville. JAG is the restaurant management arm of Jose Andres, a globally acclaimed chef, restaurateur, and media personality that operates nearly 40 restaurants, bars, and lounges across the country and the globe, including several at prominent lodging properties. We believe this comprehensive relationship will leverage the superb physical attributes of the hotel to create unique destination dining venues, and the beverage program will include proven JAG concepts such as