Thank you, Tom, and welcome to our first quarter earnings call. For the remainder of the call, including guidance, I will reference adjusted metrics, which excludes stock-based compensation and restructuring charges. Our first quarter results were in line with the financial range we provided in our last quarterly update. First quarter revenue was approximately $1.84 billion, and we shipped approximately 511,300 millimeter equivalent wafers in the quarter, an 18% decrease from the year prior period, driven by reduced wafer shipments, primarily related to mobile and consumer driven end markets. ASP increased approximately 12% year-over-year, driven by ramping long-term customer agreements with better pricing, as well as continued improvement in product mix. Wafer revenue from our end markets accounted for approximately 87% of total revenue. Non-wafer revenue, which includes revenue from radicals, non-recurring engineering, expedite fees, and other items accounted for approximately 13% of total revenue for the first quarter, broadly consistent with our expectations. Let me now provide an update on our revenues by end markets. Smart mobile devices represented approximately 38% of the quarter's total revenue. First quarter revenue declined 29% from the prior year period, principally driven by reduced volumes in the low-to-mid tier smartphone segments and a continuation of the well-publicized inventory correction within the broader smart mobile market. This decline was partially offset by higher ASPs, premium tier mix growth, and continued content growth in our RF transceiver and audio products, which recorded double-digit growth from the prior year period. As you've heard from others, inventory levels have remained higher than expected in most of the smart mobile markets during the first quarter as the inventory correction continues to work through the supply chain. We believe that inventory levels will be largely normalized throughout the first half of 2023, and that more historical inventory levels will be achieved by the second half of the year. We continue to focus on growth opportunities in our RF transceiver and Wi-Fi SoC technologies as we seek greater value capture from the premium tier smartphone segment by supporting the transition towards more feature rich handsets. In the first quarter, revenue for the home and industrial IoT market grew approximately 7% year-over-year, representing approximately 19% of the quarter’s total revenue. Year-over-year growth in this end market was primarily driven by our aerospace and defense business, where we continue to ramp to volume our design wins and driven by our wireless technologies that enable the broadening use of digital payments as well as industrial and government connected devices. We expect increased customer demand for next-generation analog and mix signal technologies, particularly within the smart card and aerospace and defense end markets to largely offset the near-term inventory correction and market softness and the more consumer centric portions of the IoT market. As Tom discussed, automotive continues to be a strong growth segment for us. First quarter revenue grew 122% year-over-year, representing approximately 10% of the quarter's total revenue. As discussed in our fourth quarter results, we expect to see a continued ramp across our processing, sensing, connectivity, and vehicle infrastructures technologies throughout 2023. We have and will continue to allocate more of our existing capacity as well as add additional capacity to support the continued growth of silicon content within the automotive market. Next, moving to our communications, infrastructure, and data center end market. First quarter revenue grew approximately 8% year-over-year and comprised approximately 19% of the quarter's total revenue, which was broadly in line with expectations. Due to the buildup of data center inventory in 2022, and demand softening for enterprise wired infrastructure, we expect to see a decline in revenues for this end market through the first half of 2023, with volumes expected to improve later in the second half of 2023. Finally, our personal computing end market declined 12% year-over-year in the first quarter and comprised approximately 2% of the quarter's total revenue. PC and notebook demand continues to be soft and we expect this end market to continue to decline as a percentage of our overall revenue in 2023. Also in the first quarter, we were awarded and received a tax refund of $152 million by the State of New York related to the significant manufacturing investments we've made in the state. We're proud to have partnered with the State of New York to create tremendous value for the local community. For the first quarter, we delivered adjusted gross profit of $525 million, which was at the high end of our guided range and translates into approximately 28.5% adjusted gross margin. The roughly 320 basis point year-over-year improvement was driven by higher ASPs and a richer product mix. Operating expenses for the first quarter represented approximately 11% of total revenue. R&D for the quarter was approximately $105 million and SG&A declined sequentially to $94 million. Total operating expenses were about $199 million, as we continue to prudently manage our costs. We delivered operating profit of $326 million for the quarter, which translates into an approximately 17.7% adjusted operating margin roughly 330 basis points better than the year ago period and above the high end of our guided range. First quarter net interest and other expense was $13 million, and we incurred a tax expense of $23 million in the quarter. We delivered first quarter adjusted net income of approximately $290 million, an increase of approximately $58 million from the year ago period. As a result, we reported adjusted diluted earnings of $0.52 per share for the quarter. Let me now provide some key balance sheet and cash flow metrics. Cash flow from operations for the first quarter was $479 million. CapEx for the quarter was $957 million or roughly 52% of revenue. At the end of the first quarter, our combined total of cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities stood at approximately $3.2 billion. We also have $1 billion revolving credit facility, which remains undrawn. Before I transition to guidance for the second quarter, I will comment briefly on the outlook for the year. As Tom articulated in his prepared commentary, we believe that the first quarter represents the low point for our revenue in 2023, and that we will grow slightly on a sequential basis quarter-to-quarter-to-quarter-to-quarter throughout the year. Although, we only guide one quarter at a time, our expectation based on our internal models and our discussions with customers is that the second half of 2023 will signal the normalization of inventory levels and that increased volumes are forecast to occur later in the second half than previously anticipated. Based on updated models, we expect that year-over-year shipment volumes for 2023 will decline in the high-single-digit percentage points range, partially offset by modest improvements in ASP and mix resulting in a 2023 year-over-year revenue decline in the mid to high-single-digits. Next, let me provide you with our outlook for the second quarter. We expect total GF revenue to be between $1.81 billion and $1.85 billion. Of this, we expect non-wafer revenue to be approximately 10% of total revenue. We expect adjusted gross profit to be between $498 million and $527 million. We expect adjusted operating profit to be between $288 million and $327 million. Excluding share-based compensation for the quarter, we expect total OpEx to be between $200 million and $210 million. At the mid-point of our guidance, we expect share-based compensation to be approximately $45 million, of which roughly $16 million is related to costs of goods sold, and approximately $29 million is related to OpEx. We expect net interest and other expense for the quarter to be between $4 million and $12 million and tax expense to be between $20 million and $25 million. We expect adjusted net income to be between $256 million and $299 million, on a fully diluted share count of approximately 558 million shares. We expect adjusted earnings per share for the first quarter to be between $0.46 and $0.54. For the full-year 2023, we continued to expect CapEx to be approximately $2.25 billion. In summary, strong operational performance and proactive decision making across our business enabled us to deliver first quarter results broadly in line with the guidance ranges we provided in our fourth quarter earnings update. We are continuing to tackle the challenges presented by the cyclical headwinds impacting our industry and are implementing initiatives to mitigate their impacts on our business as we remain focused on delivering the strategic goals and financial targets set out in our long-term model. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Tom.