Thanks, Kurt. Good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining us today on our Q2 conference call. I’ll pick up the presentation this afternoon here on Slide #4. During the quarter, we continued to grow our business with the addition of new partnerships. Given the velocity of new deals and a growing book of business, this year has the potential to be our best year ever in new partners and licenses. In parallel, our existing partners continue to advance their programs in the clinic, thereby strengthening our pipeline this year and beyond. We’re driving growth in the business with strong execution and we’re doing that within an efficient operating structure and a highly scalable business model. We intend to create further visibility for our platform through publications and by advancing our technologies. Our scientists recently published an important peer-reviewed paper in the Journal of Immunology relating to our OmnidAb, a single-domain antibody technology, which we launched last November and is now driving a growing number of new partner programs. And I also note that in the second quarter, we successfully demonstrated the efficient multi-site deployability of a next-generation exploration instrument across our labs. I mentioned the exploration platform here as it has the potential to drive additional efficiencies for our partner programs and to further expand our position as an industry leader in speed, throughput, reliability, and ease of use for antibody discovery screening activities. We remain committed to the continuous improvement of our technology to meet the evolving and broadening needs of our partners and to retain a leading market position. I’m proud of the achievements of our team and feel confident in our ability to execute our strategy in order to maximize value for all of our stakeholders. Now, moving to Slide #5, I’ll start to review some of our business metrics for the quarter. We finished Q2 with 83 active partners. This includes 2 new platform license agreements that we signed in the quarter. Those are with DAAN Bio and Topaz Therapeutics. Notably, Topaz is a company focused on radio conjugates, and they represent the first of what we expect to be multiple partners focused on this space. I note also that we mentioned in our earnings release that we issued this afternoon that we expanded our existing successful discovery relationship with HanAll Biopharma, and also recently completed new deals with 92Bio and the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. As I mentioned, given the velocity of new deals and our growing book of business, this year has the potential to be our best year ever in new partner adds. Now, on Slide #6, you’ll see that our partnership base has grown by 30% over the last 2 years. And these numbers, I note are net of attrition. The expansion in our partnership base has been driven primarily by the validation of our platform and by new technology launches, as well as much more recently by our expanded business development efforts. On the next slide, Slide #7, you can see the distribution of our partners on a geographic basis linked to the partner’s headquarters location. Although I note that many of our partners’ development programs are global in scope. Our partners are predominantly based here in the U.S. with roughly equal representation between Europe and Asia. And over the past year, we’ve expanded our business development presence outside the U.S. and we expect that will result in greater diversity within our partnership base. Slide 8 shows the number of active programs at quarter end net of attrition. With a number of active programs increasing to $333 million, this represents a net add of 6 programs on a sequential basis from Q1. During Q2, 1 program transitioned from discovery to the preclinical stage, 1 moved from preclinical to Phase 1 and a third program advanced from Phase 1 to Phase 3. Our partners continue to align and reprioritize their therapeutic programs and pipelines in their normal course of business. In our small molecule ion channel programs, during Q2, GSK realigned elements of its portfolio and decided to discontinue their work on the small molecule Nav1.1 sodium channel modulator program that was for rare epilepsies. GSK continues to advance a separate preclinical stage program with us for neurological diseases. And subsequent to the close of the second quarter, Roche elected to return its rights to a small molecule program targeting Kv7.2 following an additional internal portfolio review there. We continue to work with Roche on 2 additional small molecule ion channel programs for the potential treatment of CNS disorders. Consistent with our business model and our contractual terms in those deals, the Kv7.2 and Nav1.1 small molecule programs are assets that we can repartner with others in the CNS space. Now on Slide 9, you can see here the growth in our partners’ preclinical and later-stage programs, which are some of the programs that we think can be important to near-term and mid-term value generation in our pipeline. We’ve experienced 39% growth in the number of these programs over the last 2 years, and currently, have reached a total of 50 programs at these stages. Our pipeline is robust and it’s growing, and we look forward to our partners’ progress as they advance programs into the later stages of clinical development towards the market. As you can see here now on Slide #10, as of June 30, we had 32 active clinical programs and approved products. During the quarter, Teva entered the clinic with TEV-56278, which is an OmniChicken-derived PD1 with IL-2 fusion. Last week, Teva publicly highlighted ex vivo data for this program on their earnings call. Those data showed encouraging antitumor T-cell activity, and they stated that they believe the program has potential to open up additional combo therapy approaches. Based on discussions with our partners and now with 1 already in the books, we continue to expect a total of 4 to 6 entries into clinical development for novel OmniAb-derived antibodies this year. This next slide, Slide #11, shows the wide and growing range of formats that our antibodies can support. And even though this list is quite broad as it currently stands, as we innovate around the platform and grow our partnership base, we continue to see the number of new formats expand. And although this slide is quite technical, it does really provide a nice illustration of the broad nature and the flexibility of our platform. The most recent new format at the clinical stage is the ATTENUKINE multi-specific with Teva that I just mentioned and that entered the clinic in Q2. It’s shown here on the lower part of the center panel. Now, on Slide #12, I’ll highlight a few key recent and Q2 partner updates. Genmab announced initial data from the Phase 2 trial evaluating acasunlimab as monotherapy and in combination with pembro in patients with PD-L1-positive metastatic non-small cell lung cancer. Data from this ongoing Phase 2 study informs their planned pivotal Phase 3 trial, which is expected to launch before the end of 2024. CStone recently announced European approval of sugemalimab in combination with chemo as first-line treatment for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer, which is one of the largest cancer indications and is also among the leading causes of cancer death. Also, CStone announced that it entered into a strategic commercial collaboration with Ewopharma. Under the terms of that agreement, Ewopharma has the commercial rights for sugemalimab in Switzerland and the 18 Central Eastern European Countries. Cessation presented preliminary data from its Phase 1a first-in-human study of CSX-1004, which is an investigational antibody for prophylaxis against fentanyl-related overdose, demonstrating that CSX-1004 is safe and well-tolerated under the conditions tested. In addition and importantly, the exposure data were predictive of efficacy for blocking fentanyl-induced respiratory depression as well. As the next step, Cessation is planning a Phase 2 proof-of-concept study. I mentioned Teva’s work earlier and their clinical start is also highlighted here on this slide. And lastly, Tallac disclosed FDA clearance of its IND application for ALTA-002, which is a SIRP-alpha targeting toll-like receptor agonist antibody conjugate in patients with advanced solid tumors. As you can see here on Slide #13, we look forward to numerous catalysts occurring for the balance of the year and in 2025. This is a subset of publicly disclosed events, and it represents a mix of clinical readouts, clinical starts and regulatory events. And we continued to be excited about the progress that’s being reported by our partners. And my last slide here, Slide #14, provides a current snapshot of the total milestone potential for our pipeline. And also calls out those 50 preclinical and later-stage programs in our pipeline that I highlighted earlier as near-term and mid-term value drivers. As shown here on the right side of this slide, those 50 programs at preclinical-stage and later have over $550 million in potential milestones to OmniAb. And overall, our active antibody programs have over $3 billion in potential milestones and currently the remaining active small molecule ion channel programs with Roche and GSK have approximately $700 million in remaining milestones. And with that, I will turn the call back over to Kurt for a discussion of our second quarter financial results. Kurt?