Thank you, Jay. The market disruption that occurred in the latter-half of March was caused by a combination of events, increased mortgage supply, limited bank credit availability, and quarter-end concerns, all contributed to unforeseen market illiquidity, increased volatility and credit spread widening centered around COVID-19.As Jay mentioned, we are in unprecedented times, and we worked hard to proactively manage our portfolio, preserve liquidity and reduce our leverage. The deleveraging of the portfolio through asset sales contributed to the decline in book value per common share.As shown on Slide 5, servicing-related investments comprised of full MSRs, with a UPB of approximately $30 billion and a market value of approximately $223 million, represented approximately 33% of our equity capital and approximately 11% of our investable assets, excluding cash at quarter-end.Servicing assets declined as a percentage of equity from the previous quarter, as MSR valuations were significantly impacted by the decline in mortgage and interest rates throughout the quarter, lowering the portfolio’s market value.Meanwhile, our RMBS portfolio accounted for approximately 41% of our equity, a significant decline from the previous quarter as we managed our RMBS portfolio to increase liquidity and to reduce leverage. As a percentage of investable assets, our RMBS represented approximately 89%, excluding cash at quarter-end,Our conventional and government MSR CPRs averaged approximately 20% and 15%, respectively, for the first quarter, a significant increase in March, as interest rates declined. Quarter-over-quarter, our MSR speeds were better. Improvement in the first couple of months was partially offset by the rise in speeds in March, driven by lower rates. We noticed a similar speed story in our RMBS portfolio as well during the quarter.The RMBS portfolio stood at approximately $1.7 billion, as shown on Slide 7, as the latter part of March was focused on deleveraging our portfolio and preserving liquidity. Quarter-over-quarter, the 30-year securities position grew to 93% of the portfolio, up from 87% as of December 31, and the remaining assets represented 7%.The collateral composition of the RMBS portfolio posted a weighted average three-month CPR of approximately 10.2% in the first quarter, similar to our MSR portfolio, prepayment speeds were lower in the first couple months of the quarter, but rose in March, as U.S. interest rates touched record lows as a result of the pandemic.For the first quarter, we posted a 1.25% RMBS NIM versus 0.73 NIM for the fourth quarter. The improvement in NIM was due to the lower amortization cost based on those slower prepayment speeds and was also aided by a lower repo cost, as well as improved swap income in the quarter.During the pandemic, we expect the NIM to remain volatile, given the lower mortgage rates. At quarter-end, the aggregate portfolio operated with leverage of approximately five times, down from 6.1 times the previous quarter. We ended the quarter with an aggregate portfolio duration gap of negative 0.1 years. We will continue to evaluate and alter the portfolio as necessary.I’ll now turn the call over to Mike for our first quarter financial discussion.