Good evening, and thank you for joining our Q2 2023 earnings call. This was a solid quarter for Cardlytics. Our billing, revenue and adjusted EBITDA, all exceeded our expectations for the quarter, the results reflect that this hard work in transforming the business during a difficult period for the economy and advertising market. Adjusted EBITDA performance in Q2 improved by $11.7 million year-over-year, as our efficiency measure and our new product initiative took hold. And our operating cash flow for the quarter was positive $5.7 million. These are great outcomes delivered ahead of schedule. While we are excited about the positive changes on the way, and the early momentum we have in driving new customer-facing product innovation, we have much more to accomplish in the business. Every transformation has challenges, but we are making the right long-term decisions for Cardlytics, and as our numbers demonstrate, we are clearly making progress. Here are results for Q2. Billings increased $1.6 per year-over-year to $109.4 million. U.S. billings increased 7% year-over-year. Revenue increased 1.7% year-over-year to $76.7 million. Adjusted contribution increased 6.8% year-over-year to $37.5 million. Bridge revenue decreased 3% year-over-year to $6 million. This is in line with our expectations of short-term viability in the business, given our focus on Bridge Retail Media Network products. Our focus on sales effectiveness, delivering new products, and making operational improvement, led us to exceed expectations, despite the lukewarm consumer spend in advertising synergy. While restaurants and retail categories are still in the performing versus last year, given these trend, the travel and payment vertical continues to outperform for us, even as consumer spending in that category slows. On the expense side, we continue to make the right financial decisions for the business. We renegotiated several contracts in the quarter and implemented cost optimizations across AWS and Snowflake. The underlying fundamentals in our business continue to show strength. Unique consumers activating offers increased 2% year-over-year in Q2. We saw total activations increase 10% year-over-year and total redemptions 7% year-over-year. Just like last quarter, we increased the number of users activating offers year-over-year and our current users are engaging more often. While we don't have any significant updates to our partner pipeline, discussions with multiple top 20 U.S. banks and several high-upside fintechs remain ongoing. And we are confident we will sign at least one of these major partners by the end of 2023. We will continue to update you as we make progress on these potential partnerships. Now I would like to discuss our strategic initiatives. As we are making short-term financial progress, we are also becoming a strong product-led organization, where our partners and consumers are at the center of the decisions we make as a business. First, as you know, we announced this quarter that we renegotiated a contract with Chase. While we cannot discuss financial details outside of what we already presented in last month's 8-K, this is a testament to the strategic value of our partnership. Additionally, we are happy to announce that Chase is 100% live on the new user experience. Second, our 3 important product initiatives for our bank partners and advertisers, the new Ad Server, our new user experience and cloud migration are on track to deliver long-term benefits. All our major U.S. banks have data in AWS, and most have systems in AWS. We expect nearly all major banks to move to the new Ad Server end user experience by the middle of 2024 versus the end of 2023. As we said in the past, bank time lines can change quarter-to-quarter. We're having constructive conversations with our partners, and our goal is for adoption to happen as soon as possible. Our partners continue to adopt our ad decisioning engine or ADE, to drive higher monetization and offer relevancy for the business. Most of our banks have now migrated or have agreed to migrate to ADE. Not only this, we are still seeing great results using ADE. Billings using enhanced targeting are up 10%. Activations are up 6.5% and redemptions are up 5.7%. Third, new advertising product initiatives are showing similarly exciting results. For example, multi-tier offers, which provide variable incentives based on objectives, have been effective in shifting purchase channel behavior. In a pilot of a 21-day period, in-store channels as a percentage of total spend increased from 34% to 71%. The product and engineering teams are also hard at work on new capabilities and improvements. We launched our first campaign with receipt-level reporting. This is important because it opens up incremental demand from CPGs and retailers who need product-level reporting. It also gives consumers access to better content and offers they want to see. We reduced the time it takes to process transactions from 70 hours to 35 hours. This reduction allows us to deliver rewards sooner to our partners' customers. It also makes up billings and ad serving systems more efficient. We can make more effective adjustments based on budget consumption, meaning we can more efficiently throttle campaigns at risk of over-delivering of boost campaigns that aren't meeting targets. We launched a target return on our spending pricing pilots in the past months. This pricing model leverages a dynamic marketplace and features bidding on impressions, dynamic pricing adjustments and immediate reconnection of campaign spend. While early, these capabilities at scale will vastly improve the efficiency of our financials in the long term. Fourth, we continue to diversify our business. We are making fast progress in transforming the Bridg business. Our retail media network pilots have received positive responses from major national CPG brands, and the initial feedback we've gathered highlights the excitement around the flexibility they'll have in building sophisticated audiences, seamless access to a national footprint and user friendly tools that empower them to get valuable insights, drive substantial incremental sales and accurately measure the impact of their campaigns. Product is not the only area we are upgrading. We are responsibly investing in our people, too. I want to welcome our new CFO, Alexis DeSieno at Cardlytics. We are thrilled to have attracted such a talented and capable executives. Alex's track record of collaboration across business lines and driving financial results through data-driven analysis, maxed a perfect fit to drive long-term growth and profitability for Cardlytics. She started in less than two weeks and excited to speak with all of you on our next earnings call. Alexis is just one example of the high-level talent we are adding to the business. Cardlytics potential and the tangible improvements we are making, attracting diverse and innovative talent. We saw several senior level hires with exceptional background during our product, engineering and sales teams this quarter, which will continue to elevate our capabilities and bolster our competitiveness in the market. Before I turn to our market trends and outlook, I want to share some additional insight from our platform. To give investors a better idea of our value proposition and our future potential, each quarter will surface some of the data we share with our advertising customers. This quarter, we were focused on multiline retail, a category that includes over 100 brands that most of them sell items such as apparel, electronics and home goods. In the quarter, we saw consumers spend $67 billion, a decline of 1.3% year-over-year and an uptick of 6.1% quarter-over-quarter. Average spend per customer is $196 per month in this category. This is a competitive category where customers exhibit lower loyalty. On average, consumers choose to spend with 2.7 brands per quarter. This loyalty decreases further during the holiday season in Q4, which represents 28% of the yearly spend. On a state-by-state basis for Q2, California represented 16% of multiline retail spend followed by Texas at 11% and Florida at 9%. Interestingly, despite the low brand loyalty, this market is not fragmented. Multiline retail has seen significant consolidation in recent years, with four brands representing over 85% of the spend that we analyze. This has been maintained year-over-year with the top two brands gaining market share largely from the next two brands. These are the kinds of insights that we share with our clients to help them make critical business decisions. And we're excited to continue to share more of these insights with you moving forward. Moving to market trends and our outlook. Consumer spend in the first half of the year was flat compared to 2022. Year-over-year, spend was down 2% in Q2. Restaurant and retail spend are still struggling, growing 1% and declining 3% year-over-year, respectively. Travel spend also slowed significantly at 1% growth year-over-year. There is positive news, too, the consumer still remains strong based on deposit data, and the July Consumer Confidence Index increased for the third consecutive month, hitting its highest level in two years. Labor markets have softened, but job growth were in solid. Inflation appears to be declining as spread red hikes have their intended effect. Given the uncertain economy and growth environment, we do expect some bumpiness in our results over the next several quarters. While there will be differences quarter-to-quarter, we are now on a path to sustain positive operating cash flow, free cash flow and adjusted EBITDA on an annual basis. Regardless of the economic environment, the teams are focused on improving the business, and we are moving forward with a disciplined approach. The organizational changes we are making continue to give our teams room to operate with speed and a clear focus. Our results this quarter are great sign that our strategy and priorities are moving the company towards achieving consistent growth and profitability. Now I will turn it over to Robert, who is filling in this quarter to discuss our financial results.