Thank you, Adam. We are pleased with our second quarter operational execution and financial performance, particularly given the halving. As Adam mentioned a moment ago, total second quarter revenue was $141 million, consisting of $111 million in digital asset self-mining revenue, $25 million from digital asset hosted mining and $5.5 million from HPC hosting. Digital asset self-mining gross profit for the quarter was $30.7 million. Self-mining revenue increased by $13.7 million or 14% year-over-year, primarily from a 134% increase in the price of bitcoin and an increase of 28% in our self-mining hash rate, which was due to the deployment of approximately 19,000 additional new generation self-mining units. Although our self-mining hash rate increased 28%, the April 2024 halving and a 68% increase in the network hash rate led to a 52% decrease in the number of bitcoin earned during the quarter. Digital asset self mining cost of revenue increased by $13.2 million for the fiscal second quarter of 2024. The increase was primarily driven by an increase in depreciation expense resulting from the deployment of our new self-mining units, an increase in payroll and benefits costs associated with merit and market adjustments made during the quarter and higher stock-based compensation. Segment gross margin was 28% in the quarter. HPC hosting revenue of $5.5 million exceeded HPC hosting cost of revenue of $4.9 million for the fiscal second quarter of 2024 by $0.6 million for a GAAP gross margin of 11%. Revenue at the Austin site ramped up over the course of the quarter based on the original delivery schedule. While GAAP lease expenses were accelerated as a result of delivering the data center capacity more than 30 days ahead of schedule. As a reminder, the HPC hosting costs for the Austin data center consists primarily of lease and power expenses. Our power expenses are a direct pass-through to our client with no added margin. Overall, this resulted in a lower-than-anticipated GAAP margin in the initial quarter of operations. We anticipate the Austin data center margin to improve over time to between 35% and 40%, excluding power pass-through as the additional lease expense associated with the acceleration of HPC capacity will be fully recognized by the first half of 2025 resulting in more normalized margins. It is important to note that the terms of our hosting contract for our Austin data center, which is leased from a third-party, very significantly from those of our larger HPC hosting contracts, where we are modifying our owned infrastructure and therefore, do not incur lease expenses. A summary of our segment economics can be found on Slide 8. Gross margins in the quarter were 28%, 30% and 11%, respectively, for digital asset self-mining, digital asset hosting and HPC hosting. Our power costs were favorable in the quarter, declining to $0.0402 from $0.0425 per kilowatt hour for the same period in the prior year. Operating expenses for the fiscal second quarter of 2024 totaled $31.4 million as compared to $27.1 million for the same period in the prior year. The increase of $4.3 million was primarily attributable to $7.2 million increase in personnel and related expenses, and $4.6 million of HPC hosting segment start-up costs incurred during the current period, partially offset by lower stock-based compensation of $6.5 million due to cancellations and forfeitures of equity-based awards and a decrease of $1.6 million in bankruptcy advisory cost. Net loss for the fiscal second quarter of 2024 was $804.9 million as compared to a net loss of $9.3 million for the same period in the prior year. The increase in net loss of $795.6 million was primarily due to a net $796 million non-cash mark-to-market adjustments to our warrants and contingent value right liabilities required as a result of significant quarter-over-quarter increase in the value of our equity. Also contributing to the increase in net loss was a $14.8 million increase in interest expense, partially offset by a $18.5 million decrease in reorganization items net with no comparable activity for the same period in fiscal 2024 due to the company’s emergence from bankruptcy during the first quarter. Non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA for the second fiscal quarter of 2024 was $46 million or 33% of revenue, a year-over-year increase of $1 million that included several offsetting adjustments. Our power contracts vary in pricing terms. As I mentioned previously, our fleet wide power cost averaged $0.0402 per kilowatt hour in the fiscal second quarter. We now expect average cost in 2024 to be between $0.042 and $0.044 per kilowatt hour. At the end of the second quarter, our self-mined to hosted mining mix was 79% to 21%, respectively. As our hosted mining contracts sunset this year and we expand our self-mining fleet, we expect our hosted mining percentage to decline. As of June 30, 2024, we operated approximately 163,500 miners in our self-mining fleet. We have included the composition of our self-mining fleet, including the model mix and efficiency on Slide 9. And now, I’d like to discuss actions we are taking to strengthen our balance sheet. We’ve enhanced our liquidity in the quarter, ending with $96 million in cash and cash equivalents, up from $50 million at the end of 2023. As illustrated on Slide 10, during the second quarter, our debt decreased by an additional $56 million to $552 million. This decrease was primarily driven by a reduction of $26.4 million in secured convertible notes that were voluntarily converted and the payment of approximately $19.2 million for a mechanics lien related to the additional 72 megawatts of infrastructure completed at our Denton, Texas data center. And shortly after the end of the second quarter, stock price appreciation triggered the mandatory conversion of our secured convertible notes, resulting in the equitization of the remaining $233.6 million, which resulted in a further decrease in our debt to $318 million. The average interest rate of our remaining debt after mandatory conversion of the secured convertible notes is approximately 12%. We continue to evaluate potential options that would further reduce our debt service and strengthen our balance sheet. Now, I’ll turn to our CapEx plans. We plan to acquire an additional 10,000 to 15,000 bitcoin miners in 2024 to continue refreshing our self-mining fleet and to achieve our 21.8 exahash self-mining hash rate goal. We anticipate the CapEx for this purchase would range between $13 million and $19 million, which is included in our 2024 CapEx plan. We also anticipate investing $13 million on the 100 megawatt expansion of our Pecos, Texas site, which is also included in our CapEx plan. CapEx associated with our contracted 382 megawatts of infrastructure to host high performance computing is funded by our existing HPC client. With the exception of the portion, we will repay through CapEx credits and therefore, is not included in our plan. I’ll now turn to a review of our mining economics summarized on Slide 11. Our direct cash cost to self-miner bitcoin in the second quarter was $29,879. This consists of power cost of $24,533 and direct cash-based facilities operations cost of $5,346, allocated based on the 79% of our fleet dedicated to self-mining and divided by total bitcoin self-mined in the second quarter of 1,680. Another way to evaluate our mining cost is by calculating the cash-based hash cost of these same items, which represents the same cost expressed as a cost per terahash per day. Our total cash-based hash cost in the second quarter was $0.03 per terahash. On Slide 12, we provide an updated illustrative financial view of our HPC contracts with our existing clients. Based on the total 382 megawatts now contracted for HPC hosting, we project aggregate total revenue over the 12-year contracts of approximately $6.7 billion with a profit margin of up to 80%. Power and utilities costs are direct pass-through to our clients and will be grossed up and included in both revenue and cost of revenue. As a reminder, our client is paying for all CapEx, and we are responsible for repaying $1.5 million per HPC megawatt through a CapEx credit once the data center is energized. Slide 13 illustrates the flow of CapEx related to the HPC data center build-out cost and their impact to our financial statements over time. Funds are deposited by CoreWeave in a joint escrow account to pay for build-out costs as they are incurred. During construction, expenses incurred to develop the HPC data centers will be recorded in construction in progress. Once the data center is placed into service, the cost will be reclassified to property, plant and equipment and begin to depreciate. And now I’d like to share a few modeling details. We continue to model a statutory effective tax rate of 23% for 2024. We also retain more than $300 million in net operating loss carryforwards, which will reduce future cash taxes. Our share count was approximately 183 million shares as of June 30, 2024, and approximately 258 million shares as of August 2, 2024. Note that approximately 40 million shares associated with the mandatory conversion of our convertible notes have now been issued along with approximately 35 million shares from exercise warrants. Our updated share count will be reflected in our third quarter filings. And now I’ll turn the call back to Adam. Adam?