Thank you, Rob, and good afternoon, everyone. First, I would like to thank our clients, partners and employees for helping us deliver another strong quarter in the face of external pressures. Today, I'll provide an overview of our results for the second quarter and then discuss our outlook for Q3 and the fiscal year. As Mike and Rob mentioned, we had a strong quarter across many of our customer and operating metrics, which underpin our long-term financial health. I continue to be energized by being part of this team as we rally together to deliver strong top and bottom line growth. All despite an unexpected high single-digit percentage impact to growth in the second quarter from Canada, and what we now expect to be a $30 million-plus headwind to our full year revenue less ancillary services. Our team's resilience paid off as we beat the high end of our adjusted EBITDA guidance and are raising our full year adjusted EBITDA margin expectations to reach approximately 490 bps increase year-over-year. At our midpoint of full year revenue less ancillary services and adjusted EBITDA guidance, we are a Rule of 40 company despite this external Canada headwind. At the same time, we executed on a strategic acquisition this quarter and are evolving our capital allocation strategy by announcing our first buyback allowing us to opportunistically return capital to shareholders. Turning to our performance this quarter, starting with revenue. Revenue less ancillary services was $99.9 million in Q2, representing a 26% year-over-year growth rate despite a high single-digit percentage headwind to growth related to our Canadian higher education business. FX rates created a slight headwind of approximately $140,000 during the quarter, but for which we would have been right at our guidance midpoint. While our revenue performance this quarter was relatively in line with our expectation, as we exited Q2 into July, we saw a slower-than-expected rolling recovery in Canada creating a mid- to high single digits negative million dollar impact instead of the expected mid-single-digit impact in Q2. This was offset by better-than-expected volumes from U.K. and Australia higher education clients and stronger international corridors performance. We continue to see strong volume growth with total payment volumes during the quarter reaching $4.9 billion, growing 19% year-over-year. From a monetization standpoint, our spreads have remained relatively consistent and stable over the last several reporting quarters. Looking at the 2 components of our revenue. Transaction revenue is based on fees as a percent of transaction value, while platform and other revenues consists of software like fees. Starting with transaction revenue, we saw a 28% year-over-year increase, driven by a 26% increase in transaction-related payment volume, primarily in our international and U.S. education vertical as well as travel. Platform and other revenues increased 17% year-over-year, primarily driven by the platform fees that do not carry payment volumes, specifically, revenues associated with the contribution from StudyLink of $1.6 million. This is offset by softer performance in our health care business this quarter. As previously indicated, we expect the health care business to return to growth for the second half of the year. Adjusted gross profit increased to $63.4 million during the quarter, up 26% year-over-year, accelerating by about 500 basis points from Q1 2024. Adjusted gross margin was 63.5% for Q2 2024, which is flat compared to Q2 2023. As we look at the puts and takes driving gross margin year-over-year changes, business mix continues to put downward pressure with travel and B2B growing faster with a more prevalent use of credit cards. This pressure was offset by stronger trends across our main education corridors, continued payment cost optimization and a positive impact from FX shifts that occurred during settlement of transactions. These shifts are largely offset by FX hedges, which are booked in OpEx, resulting in a mitigated impact on adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA was $1.8 million above the high end of our range, and grew to $5.8 million for the quarter compared to the negative $0.1 million in Q2 2023. Adjusted EBITDA margin was up nearly 600 basis points year-over-year. The strength in adjusted EBITDA was driven by stronger gross profit and continued operating leverage, along with targeted and disciplined cost management through the year. Even with these actions, OpEx is still growing in the high single to low double-digit year-over-year range. As you heard Rob mention earlier, we're focused on investing in our growth initiatives while showing improving scalability and efficiency in the business. To close out the income statement, I would like to provide some perspective on our net income dynamics this year. In Q2, net income reflected a loss of $14 million, improving year-over-year by approximately $3 million. Q2 includes a higher income tax provision of approximately $4 million based on full year tax estimates, which amplified our loss in Q2, driven by seasonality of our business. The year-to-date tax provision of $6.3 million, therefore, represents more than half the year's total tax provision and should normalize through the rest of the year, as we pivot to profitability heading into next year. Our balance sheet remains strong. We ended the quarter with approximately $571 million of available liquidity consisting of $539 million of unrestricted cash and equivalents and $32 million of highly liquid short-term marketable securities against no long-term debt. During the quarter, we invested $58 million of cash into short- and long-term corporate and government debt securities. Turning to capital allocation. We continue evolving our strategy with 3 key priorities: investing in organic growth, as we previously discussed today, executing strategic M&A and returning capital to shareholders. We've demonstrated our execution across those pillars this quarter. First, as Mike and Rob touched on earlier, the acquisition of Invoiced is a continuation of our long-term plan to supplement strong organic growth and expand across business lines. We expect Invoiced to add approximately $2 million of revenue with softer like gross margins in full year 2024. And while the business has strong adjusted EBITDA margins, we expect to reinvest the majority of the margin dollars this year to grow the combined business. Second, I'm pleased to announce that our Board of Directors have approved a share repurchase program under which we may opportunistically repurchase up to $150 million of our outstanding common stock. This is a direct reflection of our confidence in the long-term potential of the business, the strength of our balance sheet and modest operating cash needs and is a responsible way to deploy its capital that is consistent with our disciplined approach. This program allows us to opportunistically take advantage of short-term dislocations in our equity value as we focus on executing and building long-term value. Finally, it is important to note that this program still allows us ample capacity to continue to pursue strategic value-enhancing acquisitions. Moving on to guidance. For full year 2024, we expect revenue less ancillary services to be in the range of $469 million to $485 million based on spot foreign exchange rates as of June 30, 2024. This represents a year-over-year growth rate of 25% at the midpoint. The revenue impact from Canada is now expected to be double the mid-teens expected in prior guidance. So we now expect the impact to be over $30 million for the full year or approximately 8 points of growth. The $11 million reduction at the midpoint from prior guidance is driven by Canada performance, including the removal of the recapture assumption. Note that our full year revenue outlook includes a benefit of approximately $2 million from the Invoiced acquisition for the rest of the year based on the August 2 close. To provide some context on our assumptions in this guidance, we're seeing 2 key dynamics in Canada. First, within Canada, earlier government actions have made it challenging for schools to be able to fill spots as fast as they had hoped. This is creating a high single-digit impact in the second half versus prior expectations, roughly evenly spread across Q3 and Q4. Second, given the frequent conversations our team has been having with our network of global education agents, we now see increased uncertainty around the timing of students pivoting from attending score in Canada to other countries around the world where we have higher education clients or what we are calling recapture. As a result of these recent conversations and observations, we believe it is prudent to remove the mid-single-digit dollar benefit we expected to see in the second half from recapture. As we head into our largest quarter, we are assuming a relatively normal education peak in August and September, primarily in the U.S. and the U.K. We will continue watching underlying trends throughout the quarter. We are raising our full year adjusted EBITDA outlook with the new midpoint of our range above the prior high end, stemming from solid gross profit growth and OpEx discipline. We expect to deliver a full year 2024 adjusted EBITDA in the range of $72 million to $80 million. At the midpoint of our full year 2024 guidance range, we expect to generate approximately 490 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin improvement on a year-over-year basis, which represents a 170 bps increase from our prior guidance. This improvement reflects OpEx efficiencies and agile cost discipline across the teams, allowing us to look ahead towards profitability as we exit into next year. Shifting to Q3 2024. Revenue less ancillary services is expected to be in the range of $141 million to $151 million. This guidance relatively to our thoughts earlier this year is primarily impacted by performance in Canada, along with the removal of the recapture, part of which was assumed in Q3. Rounding out the guidance discussion, we expect Q3 adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $37 million to $43 million, implying a nearly 400 bps margin increase at the midpoint on a year-over-year basis. In closing, as we continue our strong track record of execution, these temporary external challenges are making us even more focused and looking to the second half of this year, to exit stronger as a team and as a business. I'll now turn it over back to the operator for questions. Operator?