Good morning, and welcome to Invesco Mortgage Capital's fourth quarter earnings call. I'll give some brief comments before turning the call over to our Chief Investment Officer, Brian Norris, to discuss the current portfolio in more detail. Also joining us on the call to participate in the Q&A are our President, Kevin Collins, and our COO, Dave Lyle. Financial conditions began to ease during the fourth quarter, despite a pair of 75 basis point increases to the Fed funds target rate, as investors began to anticipate an end to the FOMC's tightening cycle. While still at elevated levels, inflation, as seen through the CPI and PPI indices, is well below its recent highs and has begun to ease. Risk markets responded favorably, as equity markets improved, most credit spreads tightened and volatility measures moderated. After facing the most challenging environment in over a decade during the first three quarters of 2022, mortgage performance rebounded during the fourth quarter and into the first quarter of 2023, with current coupon agencies outperforming treasuries as interest rate volatility came off its recent highs. For the quarter, IVR's earnings available for distribution remains strong, coming in at $1.46 versus $1.39 last quarter. Our rotation into higher yielding, higher coupon mortgages, in addition to substantial hedging of borrowing costs with interest rate swaps, drove this increase in EAD. Over the coming quarters, we expect EAD to continue to be supported, as our repo hedge ratio remains elevated as forward starting swaps come online. Importantly, these hedges provide benefit for the long term, as the average maturity of our swap book is over 7 years. ROEs on new investments have also been a positive contributor to EAD, as the wider spreads on new purchases are attractive and we enjoy the benefit of having retained low coupon legacy swaps. While mortgage performance has been positive since the beginning of the fourth quarter, both interest rates and mortgage markets have remained volatile. Book value was largely unchanged in the fourth quarter and combined with our $0.65 dividend resulted in an economic return of approximately 5%. Given strong performance to begin 2023, book value has improved by approximately 4% since year-end through February 17. Our economic leverage remained unchanged during the quarter, finishing at 5.3 times. At quarter end, substantially all of our $4.8 billion investment portfolio was invested in Agency RMBS, and we maintain a sizable balance of unrestricted cash and unencumbered investments totaling $528 million. While mortgage valuations look attractive given the relatively wide spreads, particularly in higher coupons, our outlook for mortgages remain somewhat cautious. Mortgage performance has been highly correlated with changes in short-dated interest rate volatility, and we expect volatility to remain elevated while the near-term path of Fed funds remains uncertain. Once the Fed's path becomes clear, mortgages should enjoy significant tailwinds as volatility falls. I'll stop here, and Brian will go through the portfolio.