Thank you, Kathy, and good afternoon, everyone. Before reviewing our second quarter results, I want to address the leadership transition announced earlier this week. After a decade as Lumentum's CEO, I am retiring from my role effective tomorrow and Michael Hurlston is succeeding me and joining our Board of Directors. Leading Lumentum over the past 18 years, first at our predecessor company and then as a standalone public company, has been a privilege. I am proud of our market leading innovations, strong customer relationships and best-in-class manufacturing. We have transformed Lumentum and the photonics industry, positioning the company for continued growth. The Board and I believe that this is the right time for a leadership transition and that Michael is the right leader for the next chapter at Lumentum. His global experience, semiconductor and optical communications background and track record of driving sustained profitable growth make him uniquely qualified to lead Lumentum forward. He steps in at a time of financial and operational strength and I am confident in his ability to build upon our momentum. Serving as Lumentum's CEO has been the highlight of my career and I am deeply grateful to our talented team who has positioned us for sustained growth. I look forward to continuing my role on Lumentum's Board and to serving as an advisor to the company to ensure a smooth transition. With that, I'd like to turn to the second quarter. In the second quarter, we exceeded the high end of our guidance range for both revenue and earnings per share. This level of performance was driven by robust demand from cloud customers, both inside the data centers as well as interconnecting data centers along with an overall improving networking market. And we're just getting started. This is an exciting time for Lumentum as we position ourselves to capitalize on the rapidly expanding cloud market, where our photonics technologies play a vital role. Our photonics innovations are clearly essential to scaling compute capacity within data centers for the AI era today and into the future. Optical links enable ultra-high speed, low latency, and energy efficient data transmission in today's scale out networks. In the coming years, we believe transitioning to optical links will be essential to meeting the rapidly growing needs of scale up networks where data bandwidths are significantly larger than scale out networks. The rapid growth of compute capacity inside data centers will also drive rapid growth in data center interconnects or DCI. Cloud operators are increasingly building and planning many more and geographically dispersed interconnected data centers to address space and power availability. These require high capacity, long distance optical links, which leverage the same core technologies we have developed over several decades for telecom networks. As we indicated on our last call, demand for our components and subsystems for data center interconnect is strengthening, and we have been ramping production to fill this strong demand. We are making significant progress in advancing our cloud business through our three-pronged strategy. First, we are successfully expanding our customer base in the cloud and AI markets. Second, we are scaling capacity for our highly differentiated laser transmitter chips in our indium phosphide wafer fabs and optical circuit switch and transceiver production capacity in our proven factories outside of China to meet the rising demand. And third, we are partnering with our cloud operator and AI infrastructure customers to develop game changing optical solutions that shape their long-term technology roadmaps. With this focused approach, we are uniquely positioned to drive growth and deliver sustained value in the rapidly accelerating AI cloud era. Before discussing the second quarter details, I want to address the recent news related to DeepSeek. Discussions with cloud customers reinforce that advancements in software efficiency are key to the long-term viability of the AI business model, just as efficiency gains in optical data transmission are essential for enabling AI in data centers. These reports on improved efficiencies highlight a positive trend that strengthens the AI market for both our customers and our business. Now, let me move to additional fiscal second quarter revenue and product highlights, starting with Cloud and Networking. Our second quarter Cloud and Networking segment revenue grew 20% sequentially and 18% year-over-year, primarily driven by strong end market demand from cloud hyperscale customers. We saw sequential increases in nearly all of our Cloud and Networking product lines. In Q2, Datacom transceiver revenue grew sequentially as expected, driven by an increase in shipments to our largest cloud hyperscale customer and the start of volume production shipments to one of our new customers we highlighted on prior calls. We continue qualification work with the other new customer and expect to start initial volume production during the fourth quarter continuing to ramp through the first half of fiscal '26. Transceiver manufacturing capacity expansion is also progressing as planned. Complementing our existing production lines in Thailand, construction of our large new three-storey facility and cleanroom on the same campus is well underway, with the first floor completed and ready for tool installation. We achieved another record for EML unit shipments in Q2 and began delivering 200G lane speed EMLs to multiple customers. Based on the breadth of our 200G EML design wins, we expect to gain additional laser transmitter market share in the upcoming wave of 800G and 1.6T transceivers, utilizing the more efficient 200G EMLs for AI applications. Complementing our EMLs are our new 200G lens integrated photodetector arrays, which adds to our content opportunity in next generation 800G and 1.6T transceivers as well as strengthens our vertical integration strategy for our own cloud modules. Our wafer fab expansion plans to enable higher volumes of EMLs and other indium phosphide lasers and photodetectors continues to be on track. We still anticipate that demand for our EML chips will continue to exceed supply at least into calendar year 2026. We are experiencing strengthening demand for our DCI products as well as long haul transmission and transport solutions. These product lines, historically classified as telecom products, are increasingly utilized by cloud customers, often indirectly through our network equipment manufacturing customers. Engagement with cloud customers and AI infrastructure providers on their long-term technology and product roadmap has reached an all-time high. As part of one collaboration, we began shipping preproduction volumes of our unique ultra-high power lasers to an AI infrastructure customer for a proprietary interconnect solution in Q2 and have received follow-on orders as well as excellent feedback on the product's performance. This is a very exciting opportunity. Looking ahead to Q3, we anticipate strong sequential growth in our Cloud and Networking revenue, primarily driven by capacity additions, ramping up new customer programs and improving demand from network equipment manufacturers. Now let me move to our Industrial Tech segment. Industrial Tech segment revenue increased 15% sequentially, while being down 21% from the same quarter last year. The sequential increase was driven by higher industrial laser shipments, partially offset by seasonally lower 3D sensing shipments. The year-over-year revenue trend reflects that demand continues to be challenged due to the weak industrial end market. In Industrial Tech, we remain committed to developing innovative laser solutions that address customers' growing demand for high precision and speed. Our latest generation of 26 kilowatt fiber lasers, our most powerful yet, delivers cutting speeds up to three times faster than its predecessor. We have shipped sample units to a key customer and are receiving very positive feedback. In Q2, ultrafast laser shipments reached a new record, driven primarily by growing demand from a leading tool supplier for high volume solar cell manufacturing. We are also actively engaged with customers on new ultrafast laser opportunities as this technology gains traction in advanced packaging, displays and emerging semiconductor processes. Looking ahead to fiscal Q3, we anticipate a sequential decline in Industrial Tech revenue due to the challenging macroeconomic environment affecting industrial laser demand as well as a seasonal decline in 3D sensing revenue. In summary, we have made significant progress in executing our strategy to grow our cloud business. In Q2, we began to ramp our cloud transceiver volumes to our largest customer and one of our new customers and we set another new record for EML shipments, including new 200G lane speed variance. We are working diligently to further expand capacity for many of our products over the next several quarters and to complete qualifications on key new customer programs. Our robust pipeline of cloud customer engagements, coupled with improving trends with our network equipment manufacturing customers, strengthens our confidence in achieving our previously stated goal of reaching $500 million in quarterly revenue by the end of calendar 2025. Looking beyond, we expect significant growth in the years ahead as we capitalize on emerging opportunities in cloud and AI. Before I hand the call over to Wajid, I want to take a moment to express my sincere gratitude to all of our employees for their unwavering focus and dedication and to our customers worldwide for their trust, partnership and collaboration. With that, Wajid?