Thank you. Good evening and thank you for joining us today. I'm going to spend a few minutes covering some of the key themes from the quarter and then will turn the call over to Michael to discuss our first quarter results and the progress we've made on improving our cost structure. We know our expense outlook is one of the key areas of focus for investors and we believe the additional detail here will be helpful. As noted in our earnings release, Q1 results were unfortunately negatively impacted by two large uncontrollable items; first, $33 million of interest rate driven fair value adjustment in our Ginnie Mae and GSE MSRs, and second, $30 million of third-party monitoring costs. Despite those large expenses, reported operating expenses were still down 9% and our adjusted operating expenses, a non-GAAP measure we typically provide, were down 17% from last quarter. Excluding the MSR monitor impacts and our new initiative spending, expenses in our servicing and corporate segment were down $80 million, a 25% reduction from the prior quarter. After discussing planned cost reductions for the last few quarters, we are pleased to see that our actions are starting to take hold and we're seeing some of the benefits starting to be realized. I would also note that we are actively working on additional plans to further reduce our expenses and improve our financial results. Despite the reported GAAP loss for the quarter, the company returned to generating positive cash from operations on both a GAAP and normalized basis, a non-GAAP measure we provide. As mentioned in our last earnings call, we also have significant future value not reflected on our balance sheet. These include the value of call rights, future reverse mortgage draws, unrecorded fair value adjustment in our agency MSRs and unrecorded deferred servicing fees. We believe these items totaling approximately $345 million of incremental value to be considered in addition to the company's reported assets. As we discussed back in February, our goal and strategy going forward is to transform Ocwen into a world-class asset origination and servicing company that delivers service excellence to our customers and strong returns to our shareholders. Historically, we were considered a transaction company. In other words, we purchased assets that others created. Going forward, we want to be the one that creates the assets. We believe that this strategy will provide us more control, greater stability and higher operating margins over the long term. In line with our strategy, we have been focused on building out our lending capabilities. We saw mortgage origination volumes increase in the quarter and that segment returned to profitability. Additionally, we continued to invest in our automotive capital services commercial lending business. We are pleased with the progress so far as we're now active in 12 markets in 8 states. As of April 24, we had funded $21 million of loans in this business. We received 12 million in payoffs and have 9 million in loans outstanding. We remain encouraged with our progress here as well as the underlying investment thesis and the prospects for this business in the future. From a servicing performance perspective, for the ninth month in a row, we saw a significant reduction in CFPB consumer complaints. In the March report, Ocwen’s consumer complaints were down 21% compared to the same three month period from 2015, the most of any of the large mortgage companies. We remain focused on delivering positive borrower experiences and creating a culture, focused on continuous improvement and these results reflect that. I will note that the April report came out this afternoon and we were down 25%. In that spirit, we remain very active from a loan modification perspective, completing over 16,600 loan modifications in the quarter, of which 45% included some form of principal reduction. Additionally, we were very active in the new streamlined HAMP program in the quarter. As you may know, the streamlined HAMP programs is a new US treasury offering for 2016, focused on ensuring that every borrower who is eligible for a HAMP application received the opportunity to obtain more. As of April 21st, we’ve mailed over 35,000 letters to potential eligible borrowers and are pleased to report we have over 10,000 borrowers making trial payments under the program. After three successful trial payments, the modification becomes permanent for the homeowner. We will continue to update you on our progress in future calls. Now, I would like to take a moment to revisit some traditional analysis the company used in the past to highlight its capabilities as a servicer. Last year, these metrics weren’t always in the top of people's minds. However, I think it's important to show that despite some of the challenges we have worked through, we remain focused on delivering positive outcomes not only for borrowers but also for owners of RMBS securities that rely on Ocwen as a servicer. On page 5, we show some of our modification statistics. Since 2008, we’ve led the industry and completed over 600,000 modifications, of which over 311,000 were HAMP modifications. That number is 47% more than the next highest servicer, a stunning percentage. Additionally, we've completed almost 97,000 principal reduction modifications over that time. That is three times more than the next highest servicer. All these add up to mean that homeowners in distress have a far greater chance of keeping their home if their loan is serviced by Ocwen. We have always believed appropriate modifications and appropriate principal reduction modifications in particular offer mutually beneficial outcomes, meaning they provide benefits to not only the homeowner receiving the modification, but also the RMBS holders who receive more payments over time as a result of keeping the borrower in their home, making affordable payments. You can see evidence of this latter point on the next page. Using third-party data, we see that 81% of our sub-prime private label security loans have made 10 or more payments in the last 12 months. For the rest of the servicing industry, that is only 73%. To put that 8 point difference in perspective, if the rest of the industry was as good as Ocwen at servicing these loans, we would -- that would represent in excess of $532 million of additional cash flows to sub-prime RMBS note holders in the last 12 months alone. The bottom line is despite some of the headwinds and challenges this company has faced over the last year plus, we are still delivering differentiated industry-leading outcomes for home owners and for RMBS note holders. You'll recall that we received an upgrade in our Fitch servicer rating earlier this year. We continue to provide all the rating agencies that rates or ranks our servicing platform, ongoing updates on both our servicing performance results and on our ever-improving control environment. Based on our performance results, robust control environment and financial condition, we continue to believe that some of our servicer ratings and rankings are too low relative to other bank and non-bank servicers. We continue to work closely with and believe we have strong relationships with our various servicing and advanced financing partners, including New Residential. You will note that we have also worked closely with New Residential on the execution of various call rights transactions and are pleased that we have remained a servicer of the re-securitized performing loans issued by New Residential. While we're not making any significant updates to our disclosures related to the allegations made by certain RMBS investors represented by Gibbs & Bruns or the February SEC letter we received, I remind you that our servicing practices have been and continue to be closely monitored by trustees, master servicers, GSEs and others. We continue to believe that our servicing practices have been and are consistent with industry standards. Although as discussed earlier, we have demonstrated better overall performance for homeowners and sub-prime RMBS investors than most other servicers. I would now like to pass the call over to Michael to discuss our financial results in more detail. Michael?