Thank you, Simon, and good afternoon, everyone. Marqeta delivered a great quarter to start 2023 with net revenue growth of 31%, gross profit growth of 19%, and adjusted EBITDA margin of negative 2%. All three performance indicators were above our expectations, driven by stronger volume growth from several of our top customers, as well as accelerated execution of our cost efficiency effort. Q1 TPV was $50 billion, growing 37%, continuing to demonstrate our ability to grow at scale. Growth was stronger in the first two months of the quarter before slowing by several points in March, driven by two factors. Last year’s comps were easier early in the quarter because of the omicron outbreak, but became more difficult when the post pandemic recovery started later in the quarter. Also [indiscernible] active card was stronger in the first two months of the quarter this year, which aligns with the shifts in consumer confidence. Looking at our TPV performance by vertical. Growth in the financial services vertical continues to be the highest contributor to growth, decelerating by a few points versus Q4, but growing a little faster than the company as a whole. This was fueled by cash apps, rising card penetration among their rapidly growing users and increases in direct deposit usage, driving higher spend per card user. Lending growth including buy now pay later accelerated a little versus Q4 driven by several customers expanding their use cases and merchant categories with travel-related spending being particularly strong. Overall BNPL continues to be hampered by Klarna’s migration of a portion of one program in the third quarter of 2022. Excluding Klarna, BNPL growth was roughly similar to the overall company growth. Expense management TPV grew significantly faster than company as a whole, but growth did slow compared to prior quarters due to tougher comps. Four of our top six customers are growing faster than 75%. Q1 net revenue was $217 million, an increase of 31% consistent with last quarter. Block continues to be a strong contributor to growth driving our revenue concentration to 76% in Q1, up about two points from Q4. The increased concentration is mostly driven by the strength of cash app as well as slower BNPL growth. Revenue growth remains strong within our managed by Marqeta business, including the on-demand delivery vertical. The net revenue take rate was slightly lower than last quarter and two bps lower than Q1 2022. When comparing the take rate to last year, it is higher in three of the four major managed by Marqeta verticals. However, that is more than offset by the volume mix shift toward the powered by Marqeta business. Q1 gross profit was $89 million, growing 19% with a gross margin of 41%. The margin is lower than Q1 of last year due to an increase in Block revenue concentration, which has a margin almost one third of the rest of the business and the Klarna volume migration partly offset by the positive impact of our value-added services not directly tied to TPV. Our Q1 gross profit growth, excluding blocking Klarna is almost three times higher than the overall company growth. While the Block revenue concentration has steadily increased over the past four quarters, the Block gross profit concentration has remained consistent. This is due to less favorable volume mix within the Block business for both purchase and ATM transactions combined with improving margins in the rest of the business. The improving non-Block margins are primarily driven by better pricing from multiple bank partners, higher incentives with one network partner and a large card fulfillment benefit in the quarter. Q1 adjusted operating expenses were $94 million, essentially flat for the last three quarters, but a year-over-year growth of 10%. Approximately one point of which is inorganic driven by the inclusion of Power starting in February. Our adjusted expense growth, decelerated versus Q4, and each of our major expense categories due to realized efficiencies and the benefits of platform scale. We continue to exercise discipline in hiring as our automation and tooling efforts improve efficiency. We have also reached a healthy investment capacity. As a result, the incremental investment required to fuel our future growth and innovation is relatively small given the major platform expansions are behind us. Scale, optimization and vendor negotiations are helping our technology tool related expenses as our transaction growth of 45% is almost 20 points higher than our technology expense growth. We further reduced expenses by actively managing our use of external resources and better leveraging our internal expertise. Q1 adjusted EBITDA was negative $4 million, a margin of negative 2%. This result was better than we expected, driven almost equally between higher gross profit due to business performance and accelerated execution of our cost management effort. Interest income was $12 million driven by continued rising interest rate. The Q1 GAAP net loss was $69 million, including a $32 million one-time non-cash post combination compensation expense related to the closing of the Power acquisition. Similar to prior quarters, we had positive cash flow excluding the closing of the Power acquisition, including operating cash flow if you amortize bonus payouts. We ended the quarter with approximately $1.5 billion of cash and marketable securities. Our Board has authorized a share repurchase program of up to $200 million. We believe that our current valuation does not properly reflect the following. One, the expansion of our market opportunity with the emergence of embedded finance. Two, our differentiated product platform with the comprehensive offering of debit credit, money, movement, risk control, and program management for consumer and commercial use cases. Three, sales momentum driven by our renewed go-to-market motion. And four, increasing expense discipline and a healthy investment capacity that will limit future expense growth. At our current valuation, this attractive growth path combined with our strong balance sheet and limited cash burn make this buyback program a great opportunity to reduce dilution as we continue to manage the business for the long term. We expect this program to be roughly equivalent to both the stock-based comp shares vesting and issued in 2023. Now let’s shift to our Q2 and full year outlook. As a reminder, although a Block renewal is a top priority for us and we would like to secure renewal in 2023, the various Block contracts run beyond this year. Therefore, we cannot indicate a potential impact to our financial performance until renewal is done and have assumed current contracts are in place throughout 2023. Q2 is off to a solid start. April TPV growth was consistent with March with the managed by Marqeta business accelerating bit offset by the powered by Marqeta business decelerating on a consistent trajectory we have seen as the comps toughened due to the rapidly growing base. We expect Q2 net revenue growth to be between 17% and 19% consistent with the expectations we shared on our last call. The two more significant factors driving the slowdown and growth versus Q1 are approximately five points is driven by Q1 performance. We don’t expect to continue specifically the stronger spend per user in January and February that did not sustain as well as a large card fulfillment benefit. Second, the results in Q2 last year benefited from a higher net revenue take rate due to favorable volume mix, both in terms of merchant mix as well as pin versus signature debit mix, as well as the beginning of more robust usage of our additional services not tied directly to TPV and a resurgent corporate travel environment coming out of the pandemic. We expect Q2 gross profit growth to be in the 1% to 3% range. This is a slightly bigger step down in growth versus Q1 than we expect in revenue, primarily for two reasons. First, a drop in the average transaction size that started in late March, which pressures our gross profit due to the interplay of the transaction and volume based components of interchange and network fees. Second, the timing of incentives. Remember, Q2 is the start of our annual incentive contracts that run April to March. Therefore, the incentive benefits are lower as the volume tiers reset. As we discussed last quarter, we lost some of the full Visa incentives we were previously receiving, which will cause the step down incentives to be more significant than what we experienced last year. In Q2, typically is our lowest gross profit margin quarter for the year as the net revenue does not follow the same seasonality as incentives. As Simon mentioned, we plan to take further actions to reduce our operating expenses with a restructuring in Q2, which reduce our workforce by approximately 15%. This is part of the current management team’s broader prioritization of organizational efficiency in order to put our company on a sustainable long-term path to profitability. We expect this will result in a $40 million to $45 million reduction in our annual adjusted operating expense run rate as well as lower future share-based compensation. We do not anticipate any impact to our service, products and operations primarily for three reasons. One, we plan to be hyper focused on a relatively limited number of opportunities we feel will generate the most value for customers and therefore the highest return on investment. Second, the major components of our platform are already in place, debit, credit risk and authentication and banking and money movement solutions. And third, we have a significant – we’ve made significant progress on our automation and tooling efforts that make us less dependent on large numbers of people to complete important tasks. We plan to execute the restructuring in the next few weeks. So there will be a small benefit to Q2 adjusted operating expense. We expect Q2 adjusted operating expense growth to be in the low to mid single digit. We will also incur a one-time restructuring charge of $9 million to $11 million. Therefore, we expect Q2 adjusted EBITDA margin to be negative 4% to 6% on an organic basis, excluding a one point negative margin impact of the Power acquisition. Our expectations for the full year 2023 largely remain unchanged with the exception of our adjusted EBITDA margin. Although the Q1 outperformance give us a small boost for the full year, we still expect 2023 net revenue growth to be in the low 20s, given the level of macroeconomic uncertainty caused by the rising interest rates, tightening credit and banking turmoil. We expect Q3 growth to be similar to Q2 before accelerating into the low 20s in Q4. Once we have fully lap the Klarna volume migration and we begin to lap the impact of heavy renewal activity. Similar to revenue, we still expect 2023 gross profit growth to be in the mid-teens. We expect Q3 growth to be in the mid-teens and then accelerate into the low-20s in Q4 in alignment with accelerating revenue growth. Before taking to account the cost benefits of restructuring, we expect the 2023 adjusted EBITDA margin to be negative low single digits on an organic basis, excluding the approximately one point negative margin impact of the Power acquisition. This is a result of our increased cost discipline as well as our realized efficiencies and platform scale. Including the revised cost base post restructuring, we now anticipate our 2023 adjusted EBITDA margin will be around breakeven. We expect adjusted EBITDA margin to be slightly positive in Q3 and positive mid-single digits in Q4. To wrap up, our strong Q1 performance across both financial and operational indicators has us on track to accomplish our goals for this year. Marqeta is at an inflection point in 2023 with exciting progress on several dimensions. I would highlight three in particular. First improvements to our go-to-market approach are driving a significant acceleration in bookings, which coincides with the massive broadening of our market opportunities due to the emergence of embedded finance. While we will still focus on specific FinTech verticals, embedded finance is a horizontal trend cutting across a wide variety of industries, making almost any company with an engaged user base and potential customer. Our highly flexible and configurable platform operating at a scale for consumer and commercial use cases is tailormade to serve the demand. The bookings will take several quarters to impact the P&L, but are a strong indicator of future growth. The integration of Power’s credit program management capabilities by the end of June, less than five months after completing the acquisition is a foundational addition to our single-stack platform. We will serve the full spectrum of credit, including B2B seller financing, consumer credit building, charge cards, transaction underwriting, and revolving credit. Our pipeline suggests the opportunity to innovate is large and moving quickly. Again, another positive sign for future growth. Lastly, we are making meaningful progress on operational efficiency, reducing waste, and the use of professional services, leveraging our scale and optimizing technology usage and incorporating automation and tooling efforts all to accelerate our path to profitability. Our restructuring in Q2 will only enhance our focus on key priorities to sustainably deliver customer and shareholder value. I will now turn it over to the operator for questions.