Thanks, David, and thank you for joining us on our call this afternoon. We had a productive first quarter as we met or exceeded our expectations on each of our core metrics. First quarter orders were the highest they’ve been in a decade, up nearly 30% year-over-year, as we benefited from both the healthy demand environment and community count growth. And importantly, gross margins ticked up, reflecting the improvement efforts we adopted last year once demand stabilized. This strong performance drove a large increase in our backlog, enhancing our visibility and adding to our confidence for the full-year. It’s fair to acknowledge that sales comparisons with the prior year were relatively easy in the first quarter. But that doesn’t diminish the fact that there are both market and company-specific factors supporting our expectations for future improvement. At the market level, fundamentals remain strong across the Board. Continued wage growth, low unemployment and high consumer confidence, all support robust demand, and the supply of both new and used homes remains quite low. Of course, sustaining home affordability remains to challenge, but the reduction in interest rates over the last year has directly benefited homebuyers. Inside the company, we are using the strong economic backdrop to reduce incentives as one part of our effort to drive gross margins back into the 2020s. The first quarter reflected early results of these efforts, with higher margins in backlog providing further evidence of the opportunity in front of us. With absorption rates at current levels, we are laser-focused on delivering year-over-year margin improvement in each quarter this year. At the beginning of the fiscal year, we outlined three main goals for 2020. These goals arise from our longstanding balanced growth strategy, which targets a double-digit return on assets by growing EBITDA faster than revenue from a more efficient and less leveraged balance sheet. In the first quarter, we made progress on all of these goals. First, EBITDA was up 9.4%, marking the first year-over-year improvement we’ve generated in five quarters and providing momentum toward our full-year goal of more than 10% EBITDA growth. Second, strong sales and improving margins, together with the continued monetization of previously non-earning assets are pushing us toward our double-digit ROA goal by year-end. And finally, growth in closings and profitability will generate sufficient cash flow to allow us to retire more than $50 million of debt while we invest for future growth. This should allow us to achieve a net debt-to-EBITDA ratio below five times. Achieving these goals will lead to higher earnings per share, growth in book value and further growth in our return on equity, all from a less leveraged balance sheet. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Bob.