Thanks, Ming. As a reminder, our laboratory service business includes precision diagnostics, anatomic pathology, and biopharma services. These three represent our core revenue streams and do not include COVID-19 testing. And we had another very strong quarter led by precision diagnostics with all three areas showing strength. This is the first time we have seen all three areas post quarter-over-quarter growth since 2022. In the past few quarters, we have experienced some headwinds in anatomic pathology and biopharma services, but we are seeing the investments we made in those areas begin to pay off. I'll talk more about each of those momentarily. Circling back to precision diagnostics, it was up $5.7 million, or 15% quarter-over-quarter, and $11.2 million or 35% year-over-year. The tremendous strength has been led by reproductive health testing, including Beacon expanded carrier screening. Beacon continues to be a bright spot for Fulgent. We have to have significant market share, establish strong B2B relationships, and continue to have a sales pipeline that gives us confidence and continued growth. The laboratory continues to perform exceptionally well, even with the record volume we are seeing. On average, our turnaround time has been 11 days, which is fantastic and a true testament to the power of our technology platform. To scale this rapidly and continue to provide rapid turnaround time is not trivial. We've also been able to give our clients the flexibility to custom tailor the gene panel to their specifications. In addition, our strong engineering capabilities have allowed us to rapidly interface with client-side EMRs, allowing for orders and reports to be delivered electronically. Beacon will continue to be a focus for Fulgent as we now find ourselves as one of the leading providers of expanded care screening services. Staying on reproductive health, last quarter we announced we have launched a non-invasive prenatal test, or NIPT, for the first time, a test we have branded NOVA. NOVA is the first NIPT to include common aneuploidies, microdeletions, and monogenic conditions caused by de novo point mutations. We continue to make good progress with our go-to-market strategy and anticipate seeing additional progress in the coming quarters. As we have mentioned, we expect volume to be low for some time as we bring this novel test to market. However, we believe over time clinicians will see the value of this new NIPT methodology. I wanted to provide a quick update on our oncology portfolio. We recently gained MolDX approval for our liquid biopsy assay for high-stage solid tumors, complementing our previously approved solid tumor tissue and heme NGS assays. Our liquid biopsy offering is a comprehensive test including over 500 genes, which detects tumor mutation burden, microsatellite instability, indels, and copy number alterations in addition to single nucleotide variants. The coverage rate is approximately $2,840 and is retroactive back to September 2023. This is just one more piece of the puzzle, helping complete a near one-stop shop for oncologists. Over time, the focus will be to continue to build out the commercial team and capture market share, leaning on this one-stop shop offering and excellent quality, Q&S rates and turnaround time. Turning to anatomic pathology, we are pleased to see this area return to growth, albeit small. Anatomic pathology has seen multiple quarters of headwinds related to our integration of the acquisition of informed diagnostics and some macro factors, but we now see this area stabilized. And more importantly, the sales team is closing meaningful new accounts and the pipeline is strong. This is a result of a revamped go-to-market strategy and improved sales team and continued laboratory performance as it relates to quality and turnaround time. Also during the quarter, we relocated the operation to our newly purchased building at Coppell, Texas, and consolidated our New York laboratory. This was not trivial, yet executed very well, a special thanks to all the team members who worked so hard on this. We believe this investment will provide long-term advantages related to capacity, efficiency, and cost. Biopharma services also return to growth in the second quarter. As we have mentioned in previous calls, we continue to expand our technical capabilities, allowing us to address a larger market. We have invested an additional sales headcount in this area and are building a robust sales funnel. This market continues to expand as Biopharmaline’s more on multi-omics studies for their drug development and we believe we are in a good position to continue to partner up on these studies. Nonetheless, this is an area we still expect results to vary from period-to-period due to the nature of the project and a lengthy sales cycle. There were some questions around the new FDA regulations on lab-developed tests at the time of our last call, and we have gained some clarification, although many questions remain, at a high level, we interpret the new regulations as a potentially positive catalyst for Fulgent. Many of our tests are New York State approved, and we have over 20,000 tests launched on our menu before the May 6, 2024 publication date, which is the operative date for the purposes of the currently marketed test enforcement discretion policy. As long as they're not modified, it appears these tests will likely only need to meet device regulatory requirements that become applicable at Stage 1, Stage 2, and Stage 3 of the FDA's phase-out timeline, and we don't presently expect material disruptions to our service offerings. Stage 1 includes FDA medical device reporting, which will require laboratories to report certain device-related adverse events and product problems to FDA within a specific timeframe. Stage 1 also requires labs to maintain compliant files for each test they offer and to report any corrections or removals to the agency. Stage 2 requires each laboratory to be registered with the FDA and to list their commercial tests with the agency. It also phases in device labeling requirements and certain other compliance rules. Stage 3 applies certain other quality system regulations to laboratories and their tests with the specific requirements depending in large part on whether a currently marketed test is approved by New York State or not. These new regulations may make it more difficult for new labs to open or new tests to be launched at existing laboratories, potentially creating a competitive moat for our company. However, there is a federal lawsuit pending against the FDA, which argues that the agency did not have the authority to announce the LDT final rule. The plaintiffs in that case are seeking to vacate FDA's issuance of the final rule. The outcome of that lawsuit is highly uncertain, and it may change the legal and regulatory landscape for clinical laboratories. Accordingly, this is all very new and much could change. Ultimately, the effect of these regulations may not be as we currently expect. So we will continue to monitor the FDA's implementation of these new regulations and the ongoing litigation that is attempting to invalidate the final rule. In closing, we are very pleased with our progress so far this year and optimistic about the upcoming quarters. We believe with our large diverse product offering and a powerful technology platform, we are primed to continue to build on our success. I'll now turn the call over to Paul Kim, our Chief Financial Officer. Paul?