Thank you, Jay. Throughout the quarter, U.S. Treasury rates fluctuated, but ended up varying only slightly from the previous quarter-end. Markets were torn by geo-political concerns, a steady diet of media headlines as well as the constant dysfunction of Washington during the third quarter. The U.S. 10-year rallied from 231 and touched 204 and has roughly turned the course and finish the quarter at 234. During the quarter, mortgages outperform treasury and swaps similar to other spread products. Economically, U.S. continues to improve as that has consistently beat expectations since mid-June, according to city's U.S. price index. In the absence of the big economic geopolitical surprise we believe the Fed is on track to raise the Fed funds target at the December FOMC meeting, the Fed reit increase this year. Moving forward, Slide 5 highlights our aggregate investment portfolio composition. At quarter end, our servicing related investments comprised solely of MSRs, represented approximately 20% of our equity capital and approximately 5% of our investable assets, excluding cash. Servicing related assets as a percentage of total assets increased due to the deployment of cash into the quarter and the MSR investment. As a result, our MBS portfolio accounted for approximately 73% of our equity and approximately 95% of our investable assets, excluding cash at quarter-end. As shown on Slide 6, as of September 30, we held MSRs with a UPB of $9.7 billion and a market value of approximately $97 million. While interest rates remain at lower levels for most of the third quarter, our conventional and government speeds remain relatively stable. Life-to-date, our conventional MSR, CPRs are averaging approximately 10.4%, while our government MSR, CPRs are averaging 9.7%. As of September 30, the RMBS portfolios stood at approximately $1.81 billion as shown on Slide 7, an increase from approximately $1.36 billion as of June 30. The increase was driven by the deployment of the proceeds from the preferred offering that we completed in August. Overtime, we expect that a significant portion of the funds currently invested in RMBS will be redeployed in MSRs. During the quarter, we modest increased the 30-year securities provisions of our RMBS portfolio to 72% versus 71% from the previous quarter. 20-year and 15-year fixed rate pools as well as shorter duration assets represented 28% of the RMBS portfolio at quarter-end. In the third quarter the RMBS portfolio posted a weighted average 3-month CPR of approximately 5.95%, up from 5.2% posted in the previous quarter as shown on Slide 8. Overall, the portfolio continue to benefit from collateral composition during the quarter, despite lower interest rate. For the third quarter, we posted a 1.26% RMBS NIM versus the 1.78% NIM for the second quarter. The lower NIM was driven by combination of factors, the timing of the redeplyoment of the preferred capital, in addition to increase the repo cost and price amortization. At quarter-end, repo cost averaged 137 basis points versus averaging 119 basis points in the second quarter. The higher costs were partially offset by the increased 3-month LIBOR cost, which benefited the receiving portion of our swap hedges. Based on these factors, we continue to expect our NIM to fluctuate. During the quarter, the aggregate portfolio operated with leverage of 6.8x and a negative duration GAAP. As shown on Slide 9, we ended the quarter with an aggregate portfolio duration GAAP of minus 0.53 years. I'll now turn the call over to Marty for our third quarter financial results.