Thank you, Claire. And welcome to our Q1 earnings call. Our first quarter results were pretty closely aligned with our expectations going into the quarter. Revenues of $226 million were just above the midpoint of guidance, representing a 25% decline from Q4. Gross margin of 15.5% came in at the lower end of the range due to a less favorable mix. We were able to closely manage operating expenses during the quarter and achieved about a 10% reduction compared to Q4. And as a result, our operating margin of 6.1% was right at the midpoint. Earnings of $0.38 per share was well above the range due in that tax benefit, which as Larry will discuss later, more than offset the greater FX expense in the quarter. So while our Q1 results were consistent with our expectations, the customer demand environment has further weakened year-to-date. We witness incremental push outs in order cancellations for most of our OEM customers as we progress through the quarter, largely as a result of additional reductions in memory investments as well as some curtailment of spending on leading edge logic. In particular, the component side of our business, which is largely comprised of weldments and precision machine parts, and which typically represents about a quarter of our revenue, has seen deeper cuts than we had expected entering the year as our customers work to reduce their inventory levels. This drove the unfavorable mix versus what we anticipated for the first quarter. In our gas panel business, our expectations for the second quarter sales are lower than what we expected at this time last quarter with the adjustments to our forecast closely mirroring the expected declines in new system builds of our largest customers. With our current visibility, we are expecting a 20% sequential decline in revenues for Q2, followed by a recovery. We believe Q2 marks the trough quarter for our revenues this year, with both the gas panel and the component businesses expected to grow sequentially in Q3 and Q4. Product mix will again be less favorable with the expected revenue profile in Q2. And as Larry will discuss in our detailed guidance, we are expecting gross margins to bottom out in the low to mid 14% level in Q2 before beginning to recover in the second half. We believe it is well understood at this point that the further softening in semiconductor CapEx expectations this year reflects a 20% to 25% decline in total wafer fab equipment spend. And within this range, the non-litho part of the market is now expected to be down by at least 30%. In the face of these significant market headwinds, during our call last quarter, we discussed a few aspects of our business that could help mitigate these significant declines. These include our growing business in the EUV lithography market, which while still a small portion of our revenues is a bright spot this year. We also are less exposed to the memory market today than ever before. Based on our customers' revenues by end market, we estimate that memory WFE investments drove approximately 40% of our sales in 2022. While that marks a significant decline from the 50% to 70% levels seen over the prior few years, this segment of our business is now seen spending cuts of about 50% this year. On the logic and foundry side, we believe our revenue profile is highly leveraged to the most advanced nodes. And the capital investments in this important part of the market have also witnessed incremental reductions year-to-date. The non-semi portion of our revenue, which comes from the IMG acquisition, addresses areas such as medical, industrial and aerospace. While still a small portion of our business, these segments previously were expected to perform quite a bit better in WFE in 2023. And now we've seen some additional softness in these non-semi markets that reflect the overall weakness in the macroeconomic conditions. In the longer term, we believe that each of these markets, in particular advanced node, logic and memory, will provide Ichor with the ability to achieve a strong revenue recovery when the spending environment improves, which is pretty much inevitable, especially with these unsustainably low levels of memory investments. During this time, we will continue to focus on driving share gains for our proprietary products and make investments in new offerings that support our customers' long-term technology roadmaps. We remain focused on utilizing slowdown to complete qualification on new products to both increase our share of market as well as the internally manufactured content of our existing products. As a reminder, our areas of focus remain achieving customer qualifications for internally developed machining components, leveraging our global weldment footprint to gain additional share, completing the qualifications of our initial next generation gas panels, qualifying our chemical delivery systems as well as developing new components that address the web processing market, and qualifying our gas delivery solutions with key customers serving the growing silicon carbide market. We continue to make good progress on all these fronts. We expect to finalize the qualification of incremental machining components business by midyear. And we'll begin shipping these shortly thereafter. These components will be integrated in our existing gas panels that we manufacture today will be margin accretive. The next generation gas panel evaluation units that we have shipped are progressing well. We now expect to ship two to three additional evaluation units in the next several months. Once these ship, we will be actively engaged with three customers. With the successful completion of each of these evaluations and expected subsequent qualifications, we expect initial revenues for our next generation gas panel to begin in the first half of 2024. The new gains in our chemical delivery business are progressing but at a slower pace than our gas delivery products. We remain confident that our new chemical delivery module will gain additional traction later this year. And finally, we're pleased to report that we have completed delivery and customer qualification of our first gas panels for the silicon carbide market and will begin volume production by midyear 2023. Before turning the call over to Larry, I'll remind everyone here today that our revenues tend to recover more sharply when industry spending rebounds. As I mentioned, with our current visibility, we see revenues bottoming out in Q2 followed by the beginning of a recovery. Depending on the slope of the recovery, we'd see a material improvement in customer demand for year end. In the meantime, we are managing through the lower demand environment by focusing on delivering solid financial results as the business recovers in the second half, improving our operational capabilities, qualifying our internally developed products and developing new products that align with our customers' needs for both technology and costs. And with that, I'll now turn the call over to Larry. Larry?