Thank you, Nancy. Thanks, everyone, for joining the call. We will review the second quarter results, and then, of course, we will open it up for questions. Starting with our revenue items on Page three of the release, we are again pleased with our financial results this quarter as we again produced record net revenues and pretax income. Commissions rose to a record $516 million, 27% above last year's second quarter. We continue to see higher trading volumes from our growing base of active customers, with options and futures both setting new quarterly volume records. Net interest income also reached a quarterly record of $860 million, despite lower benchmark rates in some of the major currencies. And a risk-off patch posture, adopted by investors responding to tariff-driven market uncertainty at the beginning of the quarter. We recognized a one-time credit of $26 million related to recovery of taxes withheld at source, which is reflected in segregated cash interest. Without this, our net interest income still reached a record $834 million. Higher segregated cash balances and strong securities lending contributed to these results. Net interest income also received a benefit from lower interest expense on customer cash balances. As rates have declined worldwide over the past year. Other fees and services generated $62 million, down 9% from the prior year driven by more cautious risk-taking by clients, leading to lower risk exposure fees. Partially offset by positive contributions from higher market data and FDIC sweep fees. Other income includes gains and losses on our investments, our currency diversification strategy, and principal transactions. Note that many of these noncore items are excluded in our adjusted earnings. Our other income was a $42 million gain both as and as adjusted. Turning to expenses. Execution, clearing, and distribution costs. $116 million in the quarter, up just 1% over the year-ago quarter despite significantly higher volumes, in options and futures which carry higher fees. Midway through the quarter, the SEC fee rate was cut from $27.80 per million to zero. Had it been in effect the entire quarter, commission revenue and execution and clearing expense would both have been an estimated $15 million higher. The SEC fee is a pass-through to customers, so it does not impact our profitability. As a percent of commission revenues, execution and clearing costs were 18% in the second quarter, for a gross transactional profit margin of 82%. We calculate this by excluding from execution, clearing, and distribution $22 million of nontransaction-based costs, predominantly market data fees, which do not have a direct commission revenue component. Compensation and benefits expense was $163 million for the quarter, for a ratio of compensation expense to adjusted net revenues of 11%, unchanged from last year's quarter. IBKR stock incentive plan bonuses, vest, in the second quarter which leads to higher taxes paid for FICA and other social insurance than in other quarters. The total of these extra taxes was $5 million over the year-ago quarter. As always, we remain focused on expense discipline as reflected in our moderate staff increase of 5% over the prior year. And our headcount at June 30 was 3,087. G and A expenses were $61 million up from the year-ago quarter. Mainly on higher advertising expenses. Our pretax margin was 75% for the quarter, both as reported and as adjusted. Income taxes of $98 million, reflects the sum of the public company's $50 million and the operating companies, $48 million. The public company's effective tax rate was 18.1%, within its usual range. Moving to our balance sheet on page five of the release. Our total assets ended the quarter 33% higher than in the prior year quarter end. At $181 billion with growth driven by higher segregated cash balances and higher margin lending. New account growth helped drive our record customer credit balances, We continue to believe that our strong financial standing and competitive interest rates provide customers with an attractive place to hold their idle cash. We have no long-term debt. Profit growth drove our firm equity up 22%. To $18.5 billion. We maintain a balance sheet geared towards supporting growth in our existing businesses and helping us win new business by demonstrating our strength to prospective clients and partners also considering overall capital allocation. The consistent strength of our business and our healthy balance sheet supported our raising the dividend in the second quarter, from $1 per year to $1.28. Or 32¢ on a split-adjusted basis. In our operating data on pages six and seven, our customer trading volumes tracked industry growth over the prior year quarter in our three major product classes. Options and futures contract volumes rose 24% in 18%, respectively, and stock share volumes rose 31%. On page seven, you can see that total customer DARTs were 3.6 million trades per day, up 49% from the prior year and strong in all product classes. Commission per cleared commissionable order of $2.05, was down from last year primarily due to the elimination of the SEC fee mid-quarter and the performance of our smart order router leading to the capture of higher exchange rebates. Which as pass-throughs, serve to lower both our commission revenues and our execution and clearing costs. Page eight shows our net interest margin or NIM numbers. Total GAAP net interest income was $860 million for the quarter, up 9% on the year-ago quarter. And excluding the $26 million recovery of taxes withheld at source, it was $834 million. This quarter's NIM is also adjusted by removing this one-time credit of $26 million from segregated cash interest. The adjusted NIM net interest income was $861 million. We also include, for NIM purposes, certain income that is more appropriately considered interest, but that for GAAP purposes is classified as other fees and services, or as other income. Net interest income reflects strength in segregated cash interest and securities lending. As well as a decrease in interest expense driven by lower benchmark interest rates on customer cash balances. A few central banks, The UK, Australia, and Europe, reduced rates again this quarter while others, including The US, Canada, Hong Kong, and Switzerland held steady. Year on year, the average US Fed funds rate fell 100 basis points or 19%. Despite this decline, our segregated cash interest income, was up 2% on higher balances. While margin loan interest decreased 6% on lower rates, but was bolstered by higher lending balances. The average duration of our investment portfolio remained at less than thirty days. The US dollar yield curve remains inverted from the short to medium term, we continue to maximize what we earn. By focusing on short-term yields, rather than accept the lower yields and higher duration risk of longer maturities, particularly in an unpredictable economic environment. The strategy also allows us to maintain a relatively tight maturity match between our assets and liabilities. Securities lending net interest was stronger this quarter, after a long period in the industry with few of the hard-to-borrow names that drive revenue, there was an uptick. In hard-to-borrows that we were able to capitalize on. What we have mentioned in the past still holds true. Some of the typical drivers of securities lending including IPOs and merger and acquisition activity, are somewhat more active than in 2024 but without a substantial impact on the securities lending market. Nevertheless, we have been consistently in raising the total notional dollar value of securities we lend. As benchmark interest rates, rose from the near zero from near zero in 2022, more of what we earned from securities lending, became classified as interest on segregated cash. We estimate that if the additional interest earned and paid on cash collateral, were included under securities borrowed and loaned, then securities lending net revenue would have been $251 million of the quarter, versus $194 million in the prior year quarter. A 29% increase. Interest on customer credit balances, the interest we pay to our customers on the cash in their accounts, declined on lower benchmark rates, even though we built up higher cash client cash balances from new account growth, and from risk-reducing sales resulting in cash balances. As we have noted in the past, the high interest rates we pay on customer cash currently 3.83% on qualified US dollar balances, is a significant attraction to new customers. Fully rate-sensitive customer balances ended the current quarter, at $22.8 billion versus $18.6 billion in the year-ago quarter. Now for our estimates, of the impact of changes in rates, given market expectations of rate cuts, sometime in 2025, We estimate the effect of a 25 basis point decrease in the benchmark fed funds rate to be a $73 million reduction in annual net interest income. Note that our starting point for this estimate is June 30 with the Fed funds effective rate at 4.33%, and balances as of that date. Any growth in our balance sheet and interest-earning assets would reduce this impact. About 27% of our customer cash balances is not in US dollars. So estimates of The US rate change exclude those currencies. We estimate the effect of decreases in all the relevant non-US benchmark rates. Would reduce annual net interest income by $8 million for a 25 basis point decrease in those benchmarks. A high level, a full 1% decrease in all benchmark rates would decrease our annual net interest income by $335 million. This takes into account rate-sensitive customer balances and firm equity. In the second quarter of 2024, we estimated that a 1% decrease in all benchmark rates would decrease our annual net interest income by $307 million. In the past year, the US Fed funds benchmark did in fact fall 1%. And other countries' rates for the most part fell about the same. However, this quarter's net interest income represented an annualized increase of $225 million driven by higher balances. In conclusion, we posted another financially strong quarter in net revenues and pretax margin, reflecting our continued ability to grow our customer base and deliver on our core value proposition to customers while scaling the business. Our business strategy continues to be effective. Automating as much of the brokerage business as possible, continuously improving and expanding what we offer, while minimizing what we charge.