Thanks, Joe, and good afternoon. Last quarter, we said that our Q1 results would reflect difficult macro and cyclical conditions, but the channel inventories would continue to fall and that Q1 would be the bottom of the cycle with the recovery beginning in Q2, led by the smartphone market. Those projections are proving true. And while the slope of the recovery is uncertain, we are confident that Q1 was the bottom and that a cyclical recovery is underway. Meanwhile, we continue to make excellent progress on secular growth opportunities such as motor drive, automotive and GaN, among others, and I'll touch on each of those in a moment. First quarter revenues were in line with our guidance at $106 million. sell-through exceeded sell-in by a wider-than-expected margin of about $18 million, driving a significant reduction in channel inventories. We also had our strongest quarter of bookings since the first quarter of last year. Bookings and sell-through were especially strong in March, likely reflecting a surge of activity following the Asian holidays and China's reopening. The percentage of business booked and shipped within the quarter has increased and is approaching pre-pandemic levels, suggesting that business conditions continue to normalize. We expect revenues of $122 million in the second quarter, plus or minus $5 million, a sequential increase of 15% at the midpoint. We expect another reduction in distribution inventory, which should bring the channel close to normal levels exiting the second quarter. While it is too early to forecast beyond the current quarter, the lower channel inventory should set the stage for a second half that's well above the first in terms of revenues. Smartphones were the first to correct and are leading the way out of the downturn, but we expect broader improvement later in the year as the inventories normalize in other categories. Throughout the downturn, we have remained focused on long-term growth rather than short-term operating metrics. That includes continued investment in our proprietary gallium nitride technology, a center pizza for our growth strategy. Power iterations was the first to market with high voltage GaN in 2018, and we have remained the industry leader ever since. Recent M&A activity offers an indication of the value of our proprietary GaN and the differentiated products we are designing around it. Our GaN offerings are unique in multiple ways, most obviously at the product level where we incorporate GaN Switches into a highly integrated system in a package, such as InnoSwitch. Our products eliminate the difficulties of designing power systems around discrete GaN devices and cut overall component count by about half in most designs. Our GaN is also differentiated at the device level in terms of cost, performance and high-voltage capability. While most of the players in GaN sell discrete devices made with foundry technology, our GaN is proprietary and purpose-built for our system-level products. We have full control of the technology with a robust road map for cost reduction that will achieve parity with silicon within the next couple of years. At our Analyst Day last year, we also presented road map to take GaN to higher voltages, and we announced the next step in Q1 with the launch of our first product featuring 900-volt GaN switches. The new 900-volt InnoSwitch ICs enable us to bring the benefits of GaN to a wider range of industrial and appliance applications and to better serve geographies with unstable grid voltages. We have also added a 900-volt GaN option to our InnoSwitch3 AQ family, our first GaN products for the EV market. These products deliver twice as much power as silicon in the same form factor, a crucial advantage as EV architectures evolve to more -- to power more systems from the main battery and car makers increasingly look to eliminate the 12-volt battery altogether. 900 world GaN provides ample design margin for our 400-volt EV systems, complementing our 1,700-volt silicon carbide products, which are seeing tremendous success in 800-volt EVs. Overall, we continue to be excited about our progress in the EV market, which we estimate will be a $1 billion SAM for us by 2027. We are on track for our mid-single-digit millions this year in terms of revenues and more importantly, design in activity is accelerating with a 50% increase in opportunities. Added to our design funnel compared to the first quarter of last year. These opportunities are geographically diverse and encompass a mix of EV start-ups as well as traditional automakers and their Tier 1 suppliers. We are finding attractive opportunities not just in passenger cars, but also heavy vehicles where our scale EV-driver-boards are designed for traction inverters in electric buses and trucks, construction vehicles and other heavy weight vehicles rules recently enacted in California requires 50% of all heavy vehicles to be fully electric by 2035, while Europe is also moving to require drast-reductions in CO2 emissions from heavy vehicles. KLV drivers are a plug-and-play solution for heavy vehicle inverters eliminating up to a year of development time and expense. Overall, our level of excitement about automotive opportunity continues to grow, and we expect it to be a material contributor to our revenue within the next few years. Another key element of our growth story is motorize where our Bridge Switch ICs offer simpler and more efficient alternatives to driving brushless DC motors. We are excited about the level of design activity on Bridge Switch and the customer adoption of our motor expert design and control software. This combined hardware software solution radically simplifies BLDC systems, reducing component count by 50% compared to discrete solutions, while its exceptional energy efficiency eliminates the heating required with legacy power modules. In Q1, we won a design for a washing machine pump at a top-tier European appliance OEM, which is now in mass production. A major Chinese OEM is going into production in Q2 with a split air conditioner design that customers that customer's second high-volume program using Bridge Switch. Both OEMs are long-term customers for our AC-DC products demonstrating the importance of our strong customer relationships in appliances, which are helping us overcome the industry's cautious approach to adopting new technologies. We continue to be bullish on the opportunity for Bridge Switch in the India ceiling fan market where recent regulations are driving transition to brushless DC motors. We expect a revenue contribution in the second half from a recent design win in that market. We are also seeing opportunities in heat pumps, which are growing in popularity, especially in Europe as alternatives to gas furnaces. In our High-Power business, which sits in our industrial category, we are continuing our momentum with double-digit year-over-year growth in Q1, following growth of about 20% last year. Renewable energy continues to be an important growth driver in high-power. And in Q1, we have secured a high-volume design win for utility-scale inverters at a major European supplier to the solar power industry, which should contribute significant revenues in 2023 and beyond. Before I turn it over to Sandeep, I would like to acknowledge 2 members of our Board of Directors, Bill George and Neil Seiner who will step down from the Board at our annual meeting later this month. We are grateful to both of them for their service to our stockholders, and I would add a special thanks to Bill George for his service as the Chairman of the Board for the past 5 years. We are pleased to welcome Ravi Vig, former CEO of Allegro Micro-Systems, who joined the Board on April 1 as we announced earlier this year. Effective at the annual meeting, I will take over the role of the Chairman of the Board and the role of lead independent director will be taken up by Walayar, who chairs our Audit Committee. With that, I will turn it over to Sandeep for a review of the financials.