Thank you, Ignacio. Please turn to Slide 5. We reported net income of $151 million compared to $159 million in Q1. Net interest income was $532 million, in-line with Q1. On a taxable equivalent basis, net interest income was $558 million, down $12 million from Q1 due to a higher disallowed interest expense in the calculation of taxes in Puerto Rico. Non-interest income was $160 million, a $2 million decrease from Q1, which included a $7 million insurance claim reimbursement. Excluding the Q1 reimbursement, during the quarter, non-interest income increased by $5 million, driven by customer activity. Service charges and deposit accounts increased by $3 million, mainly due to higher cash management fees on commercial customer accounts. Additionally, other service fees increased by $4 million, primarily driven by higher credit and debit card fees due to higher volume of customer transactions. Going forward, we expect non-interest income to be approximately $155 million to $160 million per quarter. The increase from our prior $150 million quarterly guidance is partly due to two transformation-related initiatives that have yielded early results. First, we have enhanced the pricing segmentation in our commercial cash management business in Puerto Rico. And second, last year, we introduced a commercial credit card product for Puerto Rico SME businesses. Both initiatives have contributed additional fee income. The provision of our credit losses was $37 million compared to $48 million in the first quarter. Total operating expenses were $640 million in Q2, an increase of $20 million from the prior quarter. This increase was primarily driven by higher professional fees by $17 million related to regulatory compliance and cybersecurity initiatives as well as technology and software expenses that increased by $4 million. During Q2, we incurred $7 million of transformation-related expenses compared to $6 million last quarter. We continue to anticipate transformation-related expenses of approximately $50 million in 2023 as these efforts are expected to accelerate in the second half of the year. Other large expense variances were higher business promotion expense by $6 million, mostly related to credit card customer loyalty programs. Higher processing and transactional services expenses by $4 million due to retail credit and debit card replacement cost. And finally, lower personnel costs by $7 million, primarily related to lower equity-based compensation expenses. Personnel costs historically exhibited a seasonal decrease in the second quarter, then typically increase for the remaining of the year, in part due to the impact of annual metric increases, which are effective on July 1. Our quarterly expense trajectory has historically ramped up as the year progresses. We anticipate that 2023 will be consistent with our experience and continue to expect expenses for the year of approximately $1.87 billion. We will strive to come in below this expected level of expenses. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was 22%. For the full-year 2023, we now expect an effective tax rate to be between 22% and 25%. This range is somewhat tighter than the 21% to 26% range provided during our last webcast. Please turn to Slide 6. Net interest income was $532 million. On a taxable equivalent basis, it was $558 million, $12 million lower than in the first quarter. Net interest margin decreased by 8 basis points to 3.14% in Q2. On a tactical equivalent basis, NIM was 3.29%, a decrease of 17 basis points versus Q1. The decrease is driven by higher interest expense on deposits, due to the increase in balance cost of public sector deposits as well as growth in high-cost deposit accounts at Popular Bank. This was partially offset by higher loan yields and balances across all major lending categories. At the end of the second quarter, public sector deposits were roughly $18.5 billion, an increase of $3 billion compared to Q1. The increase in Q2 was consistent with historical trends. And as such, by the end of 2023, we still expect public deposits to be in the range of $14 billion to $16 billion. It is important to reiterate that by law in Puerto Rico, public deposits must be 100% collateralized, while changes in the level of these deposits may impact profitability, they do not have a significant impact on our liquidity. Excluding Puerto Rico public deposits, customer deposit balances were essentially unchanged in the quarter. We did, however, see some mix shift as non-interest-bearing deposits decreased by $624 million in the quarter. This was offset by increases in time and saving deposits of Popular Bank gathered through a direct online channel. In Q2, we continue to see commercial and high net worth clients pursuing better yields on excess liquidity by moving these funds outside the banking sector. However, we have been able to capture a good portion of these in our broker-dealer, we saw inflows from deposit customers of approximately $350 million in Q2. Our ending loan balances increased by $693 million compared to Q1, driven by growth in all loan segments at BPPR and Bank commercial and construction loans at PB. This growth is net of a transfer to held for sale of a $46 million private label credit card portfolio. That portfolio was sold at our par value in early Q3. We are encouraged by the demand for credit at BPPR and PB. We will continue to take advantage of prudent opportunities to extend credit and improve the use and yield of our existing liquidity. Our interest rate sensitivity continues to be relatively neutral. As this year progresses, we expect the margin to resume an upward trajectory. The timing will depend on our loan and deposit growth and mix, investment portfolio strategy and the pace of repricing of public and incrementally retail and commercial deposits. Deposit betas in the current timing cycle are now above the prior cycle. We have seen a total cumulative deposit beta of 31% to date in this cycle. In BPPR, total deposit costs increased by 34 basis points compared to an increase of 35 basis points in Q1, led by public sector deposits. Excluding the public sector balances, deposit costs in BPPR increased by 14 basis points. In PB, deposit costs increased by 55 basis points versus 67 basis points in Q1, led by retail deposits gathered primarily through our online channel. In Puerto Rico, our combined retail and commercial deposit betas, cycle-to-date continue to be less than 10%. Given the increase in short-term interest rates, we expect a continued increase in the cost of public sector deposits. The deposit pricing agreement with the Puerto Rico public sector is market linked with the like. This source of funding results in an attractive spread on their market rates. In the second quarter, the cost of public sector deposits increased by 39 basis points compared to our April estimate of 60 basis points. The different risks in balance fluctuations and the mechanics of the interest expense calculation. We expect the cost of public deposits to increase by approximately 50 basis points in Q3. Please turn to Slide 8. Our investment portfolio is almost entirely comprised of treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities, which carry minimal credit risk. Including our cash position, this portfolio has an average duration of approximately 2.3 years. As of the end of the second quarter, the balance of the unrealized loss in our HTM portfolio stood at $746 million, a reduction of $43 million from Q1. We expect this loss will be amortized back into capital throughout the remaining life of that portfolio at a rate of approximately 5% per quarter through 2026. Please turn to Slide 9. Our return on tangible equity was 10.6% in the quarter. Regulatory capital levels remain strong. Our common equity Tier 1 ratio in Q2 of 16.9% increased by 14 basis points from Q1. Tangible book value per share at quarter end was $51.37, an increase of $1.22 per share. Given the continued uncertainty on the outlook for rates, the economy and the potential regulatory response to events in the banking sector, we do not expect to engage in a share repurchase during the remainder of 2023. We do plan, however, to consider a dividend increase later this year. We will review future capital actions as market conditions evolve. Our long-term outlook on capital return has not changed anchors our strong regulatory capital ratios. Over time, we expect our regulatory capital ratio to gravitate towards the level of our maintenance peers plus Sprint. With that, I turn the call over to Lidio.