Thank you, Joe. Overall railcar enquiries and orders remained at depressed levels. We received orders for 620 railcars in the third quarter of 2016, of which 100 railcars will be delivered to our lease fleet. Order levels for the third quarter of 2016, compared to 1,008 units ordered in the third quarter of last year and orders net of cancellations of negative 156 units ordered in the second quarter of 2016, deliveries for the third quarter of 2016 totaled 1,214 new railcars which was in line with our delivery expectations for the quarter. This compares to 2,846 railcars delivered in the same quarter of last year, which included 2,076 new and 770 rebuilt railcars. We delivered 1,372 railcars in the second quarter of 2016 all of which were new. Our order backlog at September 30, 2016 was 5,613 railcars with a sales value of approximately $557 million, down from a backlog of 12,237 railcars at September 30, 2015 and 6,207 railcars at June 30, 2016. As Joe mentioned earlier, we now expect to deliver between 5400 and 5700 railcars for the full-year 2016, including 227 rebuilt railcars. Industry-wide 5,526 units were ordered and 15,375 units were delivered during the third quarter of 2016. Excluding tank cars, there were 4,645 units ordered and 11,609 units delivered during the quarter respectively. Non-tank orders for the quarter declined by 21% when compared to the third quarter of 2015, while non-tank deliveries were essentially flat year-over-year. Industry-wide backlog consisted of 77,640 units at the end of September 2016, down from 122,591 units at September 30, 2015. Excluding tank cars, the backlog totaled 56,323 units, down 33% from the backlog of non-tank cars ending September 30, 2015. Please note that these industry figures do not include orders, deliveries or backlog totals for rebuilt railcars. Commodity loadings on US railroads in the third 2016 were down 6.9% when compared to the third quarter of 2015. Grain loadings by 17.4% in the third quarter of 2016 from third quarter of 2015 levels, but coal, metallic ores and crushed stone, sand and gravel loadings all weakened. Intermodal container loadings also fell by 3% over the same period. Lower customer asset utilization, as a result of the lower commodity traffic, continued high train velocity and a high level of existing equipment in storage has led to lower new car orders, and reduced level of railcar repairs, which has negatively impacted our parts business. Now I would like to turn the call over to Matt to address our third quarter financial results.