Thanks, Tim. We're proud of the quarter that we achieved in the face of a tough lending and insurance environment, delivering Q2 revenue of $143 million, up 14% year-over-year and above the high end of our guidance. Since last quarter, we've seen that credit quality and unemployment outlooks seem to be trending better than was previously feared and this should improve sub and near-prime lending first. The banks are still taking a conservative approach to balance sheet lending. This conservatism is driven by uncertainty around possible rate hikes, the impacts of upcoming Basel III revisions and the stickiness of their deposit base as consumers spend the last of their excess savings from the pandemic. Now, we'll take a deeper look at the revenue performance during the quarter within each category. Credit cards delivered Q2 revenue of $51 million, declining 6% year-over-year. As we mentioned last quarter, we're facing headwinds in our credit cards vertical, and the partner tightening that increased during Q1 by extending to prime consumer-related products led to a larger than typical seasonal quarter-over-quarter decline. Consumer demand remains healthy, and we believe that the strength we've seen in matches with our financial partners indicates, we are still taking share in the market. Though challenges in balance sheet-intensive areas, such as balance transfer cards is more than offsetting this. Partner behavior was relatively consistent throughout the quarter. And while we believe that current trends will persist during the second half of the year, we should see tailwinds when card issuers regain confidence in expanding their balance sheet. Loans generated Q2 revenue of $23 million, declining 4% year-over-year. Our mortgage vertical, while still declining on a year-over-year basis as the market faces significant headwinds is now starting to comp slightly easier time periods from 2022, which we expect to continue throughout the rest of this year. On the back of our progress integrating the acquisition of OTV and personal loans, we saw accelerating growth during Q2 as we were able to match consumer demand at a better rate with our partners. Just to reiterate what we mentioned last quarter. We are committed to making investments in key loans technologies to set us up to take market share when the macro environment recovers. Finally, other verticals finished Q2 with revenue of $69 million, growing 48% year-over-year. Banking growth, while still above 100% year-over-year, decelerated versus previous quarters as we begin to compare to last year's high growth levels, combined with signs of softening consumer demand, as interest rate increases slow. As mentioned last quarter, we believe we've been over-earning a bit in our banking vertical and as consumer interest starts to moderate, growth should slow further. Our insurance vertical had a strong quarter despite persistent inflationary headwinds with revenue growth of 41% year-over-year as recent product improvements allowed us to gain share in a challenging environment. SMB revenue grew 13% year-over-year as we are still seeing conservative underwriting for SMBs impact our growth rates. We still expect near-term growth rates to be at more muted levels compared to last year, but the long-term opportunity in SMB and the benefit of our vertical integration strategy has years of tailwinds remaining. Moving on to investments and profitability. During Q2, we earned $20.7 million of adjusted EBITDA at a 14% margin. a 4 point increase versus last year. We had a GAAP net loss of $10.7 million, which includes a $7.1 million income tax provision. Similar to what we mentioned last quarter, we expect to be in a tax expense position for the remainder of the year. Please refer to today's earnings press release for a full reconciliation of our GAAP to non-GAAP measures. Consumers continue to turn to the nerds for their many questions. We provided trustworthy guidance to 22 million average monthly unique users in Q2, up 9% year-over-year. Growth was a result of strength in many areas across NerdWallet, such as banking, insurance and travel as well as the impact of our acquisition of OTB. We're still seeing similar year-over-year headwinds from mortgages as the macro environment for both refinance and purchase has yet to recover. Given current revenue pressure, combined with consistent consumer demand for our learn and shop content, we now expect that MUU growth should outpace revenue growth during Q3. On to our financial outlook. As we look forward to the remainder of 2023, we remain in a challenging macro environment for many of our verticals and expect recent headwinds to persist. We plan to continue providing quarterly guidance and we'll also provide qualitative commentary for full year expectations. For the third quarter, we expect to deliver revenue in the range of $142 million to $147 million, which at the midpoint would grow 1% versus prior year. We expect to see continued, albeit slowing growth from banking as well as slightly easier comps in our loans verticals with minimal expected near-term changes in the macro outlook. Our typical seasonal increase of high single digits from Q2 to Q3 will be more muted this year, given the partner conservatism we're seeing. Insurance is expected to decline year-over-year during the second half as we believe it will still take several quarters for the industry to digest the latest profitability issues. We continue to see partners value the quality of our consumers, putting us in a position of relative strength. And while consumer fundamentals and demand still seem relatively healthy we will face a tougher comparison from the second half of last year when deposit demand was extremely strong and underwriting was a bit looser across the board, especially in prime consumer products. This all led to an expectation that revenue growth levels will remain lower than what we delivered in Q2 for the remainder of the year. Moving to profitability. We expect Q3 adjusted EBITDA in the range of $18 million to $20 million or approximately 13% of revenue at the midpoint, a 3 point increase versus prior year. Our dedication to delivering year-over-year margin improvement in the face of significant revenue deceleration showcases the benefit of our organic traffic as well as the flexibility of our business model. We are still running a large-scale brand campaign during the third quarter, so we expect to have another period of reduced spend versus last year. Aligned with how we've previously described our approach to our performance marketing lever, we will lean into verticals where we're seeing positive momentum to deliver profitable growth. Given our similar quarterly brand cadence to last year, we still expect relative adjusted EBITDA margins to be lower during the first three quarters of the year compared to Q4. We are also reconfirming that we plan to deliver a year-over-year increase in our annual adjusted EBITDA margin for yet another year and now expect that full year 2023 adjusted EBITDA margin should be over 15%, resulting in roughly 3 points of incremental margin versus 2022. I also want to take a moment to discuss the new metric disclosure that we provided within our earnings press release and shareholder letter today. We are now disclosing non-GAAP operating income or adjusted EBITDA less stock-based compensation and internally developed software costs, which were capitalized during the period. We will continue to report on both non-GAAP OI as well as adjusted EBITDA and make progress towards improved levels of profitability in both. We expect to deliver approximately 2% non-GAAP OI margin for the full year 2023 as well as mid single-digit margin for 2024. And we believe we are getting closer to a mature annualized run rate per employee for stock-based compensation. We believe that the additional expenses included in the newly disclosed metric are a part of doing business and hold ourselves accountable both internally as well as with you, our fellow shareholders for the efficiency of those investments. Delivering on our financial commitments even during challenging conditions, reinforces the resilience of our business model. We remain a key destination for consumers to navigate their financial questions during uncertain economic times and believe that our mission to provide clarity for all of life's financial decisions and relentless dedication to consumer-first experiences will help us grow across credit cycles. With that, we're ready for questions. Operator?