Thank you, Vimal, and good morning, everyone. Let's begin on Slide 5. In the second quarter, we built upon a strong start to the year as we again exceeded our guidance for organic sales growth and adjusted earnings per share. Our results demonstrate the resilience of our accelerated operating system to adapt to changes in the environment quickly and deliver on our financial commitments. At the same time, we remain committed not to compromise on our investment in growth initiatives as we are beginning to see evidence of our progress. Second quarter sales grew 5% organically, with 3 out of our 4 segments above this level. Defense and Space and UOP led growth with double-digit performances. Segment profit expanded 8% from the prior year, in line with sales, and segment margin finished nearly flat and within our guidance range. Margin expansion in Building Automation and Industrial Automation and lower corporate costs were slightly more than offset by margin pressure in Aerospace Technologies and Energy and Sustainability Solutions. An increase in research and development expense, up 60 basis points as a percentage of sales from the previous year to 4.6% pushed down current period margin at the segment level, but will enhance future period growth. Earnings per share in the second quarter was $2.45 per share, up 4% from the prior year, while adjusted earnings per share was $2.75 per share, up 10% year-over-year. Organic and inorganic segment profit growth as well as the lower tax rate more than offset headwinds from higher interest expense and lower pension income. You can find the bridge for adjusted earnings per share from 2Q '24 to 2Q '25 in the appendix of this presentation. Orders were $10.5 billion in the quarter, up 6% year-over-year, excluding the effect of acquisitions and divestitures, led by strong double-digit increase in Aerospace orders. Backlog grew 10% organically from the prior year to a new record of $36.6 billion. Second quarter free cash flow was $1 billion, down roughly $100 million from the previous year, as tariff-related cost inflation pushed up inventory levels, and capital project spending expanded as planned. We continue to dynamically allocate our excess cash flow and balance sheet capacity based upon the best opportunities the market presents to us. During the second quarter, our capital deployment was well balanced, with $2.2 billion used to complete the accretive acquisition of Sundyne and over $2.4 billion returned to shareholders, roughly $1.7 billion of share repurchases and $700 million of dividends. We also allocated $300 million for capital projects. Now let's turn to Slide 6 to discuss our second quarter performance by segment. I will give a high-level view of results and -- with additional commentary provided on the right-hand side of the slide. In the second quarter, Aerospace Technologies grew 6% organically, highlighted by another strong quarter of our Defense and Space and Commercial Aftermarket businesses. Segment margin contracted 170 basis points to 25.5% as 11% output growth, commercial excellence and productivity actions were more than offset by higher cost inflation and the impact of CAES acquisition. In Industrial Automation, sales were above our guidance range, coming in flat on an organic basis. Segment margin expanded 20 basis points to 19.2%, driven by productivity actions and commercial excellence, which more than compensated for cost pressures. In May, we completed the sale of the PPE business, which will be accretive to organic growth and margins in the second half of the year. Building Automation delivered another quarter that surpassed our expectations, with sales increasing 8% organically from the previous year. Second quarter margin expanded 90 basis points year-over-year, led by volume leverage and full quarter benefit from Access Solutions. Energy and Sustainability Solutions sales grew 6% organically in the second quarter, exceeding our expectations, driven by double- digit growth in UOP. Segment margin contracted 110 basis points to 24.1% as volume leverage and benefit from the margin accretive LNG acquisitions were more than offset by impact from a customer settlement as well as cost inflation. Now we'll move to Slide 7 to discuss our third quarter and full year guidance. Our first half outperformance has given us confidence to increase our outlook for the year, even as we remain cautious regarding the lagging effect on business demand from tariff announced in recent months. Despite this, our framework for the year remains largely unchanged. We are factoring in non-tariffs as they are written, assuming any moratoria means a later revision to higher rates, net of all of our mitigation options. Keeping in close communication with our customers and suppliers, we remain committed to fully offsetting the effect of these tariffs with a combination of productivity, pricing and alternative sourcing as we balance protecting both margins and demand. We are raising the lower end of our full year organic sales growth guidance range by 200 basis points. Factoring in our first half performance and recent short-cycle order trends, we now project growth of 4% to 5% for the year or 3% to 4% when excluding the prior year impact from the Bombardier agreement. Our year-to-date results have exceeded previous expectations, while maintaining a pragmatic approach to the back half. We have increasingly seen large energy projects and catalyst spend, which can carry attractive incremental margins in our UOP and Process Solutions business pushed out into 2026 because of macroeconomic and legislative uncertainty. Full year sales are now projected to $40.8 billion to $41.3 billion, driven primarily higher by better organic growth, tailwinds from foreign currency translation and the additional revenue from the Sundyne acquisition in June. We expect year-over-year organic sales improvement to be similar in both the third and fourth quarter when excluding the impact of the Bombardier agreement in the fourth quarter of last year. We anticipate the third quarter organic sales growth of 2% to 4%, which equates to $10 billion to $10.3 billion. For the full year, we now expect our overall segment margin to be up 40 to 60 basis points or be down 30 to 10 basis points ex Bombardier. Reduced margin expectations from the prior guidance stemmed from the high decrementals of delayed energy project work and the lag effect of pricing relative to tariff-related cost pressures in our Aerospace business. In the third quarter, segment margin is anticipated to be in the range of 22.7% to 23.1%, down 90 basis points to down 50 basis points from the prior year with BA margins expanding, ESS margin roughly flat, IR margin contracting modestly and Aero margins similar to its second quarter level. We now expect full year earnings per share of $10.45 to $10.65, up 6% to 8% or up 1% to 3%, excluding the 2024 impact of the Bombardier agreement. Earnings per share in the third quarter is anticipated to be $2.50 to $2.60, down to up 3% to up 1% from the prior year. I will provide further details on changes to our full year EPS guidance later in the presentation. We continue to expect free cash flow for the year between $5.4 billion to $5.8 billion, down 2% to up 5% ex Bombardier, which remains approximately in line with adjusted earnings per share growth. We'll give additional information on changes in free cash flow from the prior year in the appendix. Having deployed $7.8 billion in the first half of the year for share repurchases, acquisitions, dividends and couple of projects, we remain opportunistic in allocating additional capital beyond that already committed for the rest of the year. To summarize, our strong execution in the first half has raised the bar for the year, even as we prioritize setting prudent expectations in a highly dynamic environment. Focusing on what we can control, our company remains poised for strong performance ahead of our pending separations. I'll now turn to Slide 8 to give high-level overview of our outlook by segment with further details by business unit provided in the commentary portion of the slide. In Aerospace Technologies, we continue to anticipate full year sales growth in the high single-digit range or mid-single digit to high single digit when excluding the impact of the 2024 Bombardier agreement. Supported by supply chain unlock and elevated global demand amid geopolitical complex, our Defense and Space business should lead segment growth for the year. Commercial Aftermarket growth remains consistent with Air Transplant currently stronger than Business Aviation. We still expect Commercial OE sales to recover and grow in the back half of the year as customers work down existing inventories, allowing our sales to better align with OE build rates. For the third quarter, organic sales are expected to be up mid-single digits to high single digits, led by Defense and Space with continued solid growth in Commercial Aftermarket and Commercial OE no longer address. Margins for the third quarter should be consistent with the prior quarter. For the full year, margins are expected to approach 26% as volume leverage is more than offset by the impact of acquisitions and the tariff-driven cost inflation temporarily outpaces pricing. In Industrial Automation, we are increasing our 2025 sales outlook to down low single digits to down mid-single digits, given second quarter top line result and short-cycle orders holding up better to date than initially feared in April, though still down year-over-year. Order declines are not contained to IA short-cycle businesses given long-cycle pressures from delayed energy customer CapEx decisions. We expect full year IA margin to be roughly flat versus 2024, as incremental tariff-related cost inflation and volume deleverage are offset by commercial excellence, improved productivity and second half accretion from the PPE sale. For the third quarter, we also anticipate a similar sales performance as full year as growth in Sensing, thermal solutions and Warehouse and Workflow Solutions is offset by muted demand in PSS and project timing delays in core Process Solutions. Margins are expected to contract modestly from the previous year, but increase sequentially. In Building Automation, we are raising our 2025 sales outlook for the second consecutive quarter, as 2Q sales exceeded expectations and second half prospects have improved from our view in April given solid order trends. As a result, we now expect mid-single- digit to high single-digit organic sales growth. Products and solutions should grow at similar rates through the second half, driven by software-led new product introductions momentum in the U.S. and high-growth regions and customer wins in focused verticals. For the third quarter, we anticipate sales to be up mid-single digits as comps from the prior year become modestly more difficult in the back half. We expect Building Automation to expand margins meaningfully for the third quarter and for the year, supported by volume leverage and productivity actions. In Energy and Sustainability Solutions, we're slightly reducing our organic sales growth outlook to reflect a more cautious capital spending posture from UOP's energy customers. We now expect full year sales to be flat to up slightly. Advanced Materials should lead growth in the second half on improving demand tailwinds and the uplift from easing prior year comps in fluorine products. We anticipate full year ESS margin to remain roughly flat as commercial excellence and uplift from the LNG acquisition are offset by less favorable mix from reduced high-margin project and catalyst sale and cost inflation. In the third quarter, we expect ESS sales to decline low single digits with growth in Advanced Materials, offset by lower UOP projects and a headwind from the timing of catalyst shipments shifting forward into the second quarter. Just as for the full year, margin is anticipated to be around flat to 2024. Now let's move to Slide 9 to walk through our 2025 EPS bridge. With the organic segment growth contributing an additional $0.13 per share for the full year, in line with our view in the prior quarter, while second quarter results finished above our guided range, the performance included a couple of cents of benefit above the line from the Sundyne acquisition and a few extra weeks of owning PPE. It also included some UOP catalyst shipments that were expected to occur later in the year. As a result, we are largely maintaining our outlook for the second half of the year, with some pluses and minuses under the surface. Organic sales should be better, both in Building Automation and Industrial Automation, which we do not anticipate being down as much as contemplated in April. However, segment margin will be pressured some in IA because of negative mix from reduced demand for energy projects and in Aerospace because of pricing increases lagging behind tariff-related cost inflation. Acquisitions are now expected to add roughly $0.40 per share to 2025 EPS with Sundyne being added into the mix. The impact of FX, quarterly tax rates and below-the-line items are fairly straightforward in the bridge. As the company focuses its transformational efforts on completing 2 spin-off transactions, repositioning projects have slowed. However, we anticipate more spending in the second half of the year and a return to a normalized level post separation. Additional details on these items are available in the appendix of this presentation. I'll now hand the call back over to Vimal to conclude our prepared remarks.