Thanks, Matt. Good afternoon, everyone. Overall, the second quarter was in line with our expectations aside from the catastrophic weather events later in the quarter that we had previously announced. Our businesses and teams are performing well in the face of industry-wide headwinds with insurance being impacted by weather in the reinsurance market and vertical software facing a soft housing market. We continue to focus on being strong stewards of capital, focusing on investments that have strong business, product and channel unit economics, coupled with expense control. And finally, we raised $102 million of additional capital in Q2 which bolstered our balance sheet, which is solid as we look forward to these market headwinds turning to tailwinds. Revenue was solid at $98.8 million in the second quarter of 2023, an increase of 39% over the prior year, driven by the insurance segment and partially offset by the software segment, where our moving services, in particular, continue to be impacted by the soft housing market. Revenue less cost of revenue was $17.4 million, which is 18% of revenue, lower than prior quarters due to an approximately $18 million loss due to the extreme and unexpected catastrophic weather towards the end of the quarter as well as expected weather-related claims costs tied to Q2 seasonality. We expect revenue less cost revenue margin to increase in Q3 and Q4 based on historical claims patterns. And post reciprocal, as discussed previously, our margin profile is expected to further improve as we mitigate exposure to weather and volatility at Porch Group. Our vertical software segment revenue less cost of revenue margin increased by approximately 300 basis points over the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA loss was $43.1 million, driven by the extreme cat weather, hardened reinsurance market and the industry-wide decline in home sales, offset by strong expense control and an 11% year-over-year reduction in corporate G&A expenses. Gross written premium was $143 million, broadly in line with prior year as we have worked to manage premium growth. Looking at revenue by segment here on Slide 10. In the second quarter of 2023, revenue from our insurance segment was $64.3 million, growth of 127% over the prior year driven by an increase of approximately 15% in premium per policy and also lower reinsurance seating. A key part of our strategy is continuing to increase premium per policy to drive revenue and profitability in the insurance business. We are expecting further increases the premium per policy over the next year. The insurance segment was 65% of group revenue in the quarter, an increase from 40% in the prior year. Vertical software revenue was $34.4 million, a decrease of 19% over the prior year due to the 21% industry-wide housing market year-over-year decline as well as a decline in corporate relocations, both of which impacted our moving services. Moving on to adjusted EBITDA by segment. Our Insurance segment had an adjusted EBITDA loss of $31.2 million in the second quarter of 2023 due to the extreme cat weather and harder reinsurance markets we've discussed. Our HOA insurance carrier continues to focus on launching the reciprocal as well as improving underwriting performance, including future premium per policy increases, increasing deductibles and expanding the number of states where we're approved to use our unique data to better price risk. Vertical software adjusted EBITDA was $1.8 million, impacted by the soft housing market and movings decline in corporate relocations. Corporate expenses were $13.8 million in the second quarter, reducing to 14% of total revenue from 21% in the prior year, driven by strong expense control. Moving to the balance sheet. As of June 30, we had $358 million of unrestricted cash and investments. This includes $192 million of cash and investments on our insurance carrier, HOA, which we expect to transfer to the reciprocal when approved and launched. Excluding HOA, Porch held $167 million of unrestricted cash and investments, leaving us well capitalized. As a reminder, at the beginning of the second quarter, we issued $333 million of new senior secured notes, using $200 million to reduce our 2026 unsecured notes par value to $225 million and bolstering our balance sheet by adding $102 million of cash in the second quarter. In addition to the $167 million of unrestricted cash and investments at Porch Group, we held $39 million of restricted cash primarily for our captive and warranty business. This increase from $15 million in the first quarter as expected as we increase the amount of reinsurance provided by Porch's captive to HOA given current market dynamics. We are hopeful the reinsurance markets will improve, but we anticipate continued usage of our captive in 2024. As we reduce reinsurance provided by the captive in the future, we expect this cash to move back to unrestricted stacks. Additionally, we had some noncash items in Q2 that didn't impact adjusted EBITDA but are reflected in GAAP net income. First, we recorded a $81 million gain on the retirement of our -- of $200 million of our 2026 unsecured notes that I mentioned. Second, we had a $55 -- $55 million goodwill impairment charge in light of the continued challenges with the reinsurance markets, volatile weather as well as our stock price performance. And also following the period end, the allegations against Vesttoo service. From an accounting perspective, we had a $48 million net receivable. Under GAAP, we evaluated whether we can overcome a rebuttable presumption and concluded that given the high bar and that we are early on in our investigation, which is ongoing, we wrote off the balance but intend to pursue recovery. And finally, one quick item on housekeeping. In the second quarter, we have revised the definition for adjusted EBITDA, which now excludes the net receivable write-off related to the reinsurance as well as any subsequent recoveries and also restructuring costs. In Q2, our restructuring costs were around $1.1 million, which includes costs related to forming the reciprocal exchange. Now on to our outlook. Today, we are updating our full year 2023 guidance. Overall, the business is performing in line with our expectations, and the teams are executing well, including price increases in insurance and software segments. We are reiterating our revenue outlook for the year of $330 million to $350 million. However, given the extreme weather we've experienced, we will be cautious around revenue less cost revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance, in particular, until we are able to launch the reciprocal. We've made 2 adjustments there. First, as you may recall, our initial guidance did not include cat weather events in excess of our historical experience, including the approximately $18 million loss that we incurred in Q2 that we discussed today. So we have updated our guidance to account for these past losses. Second, we have also widened the ranges by $5 million to reflect the continued weather volatility and reinsurance market headwinds. Our updated guidance is revenue less cost of revenue, ranging from $145 million to $160 million and adjusted EBITDA loss ranging from $65 million to $50 million. We do continue to expect, on a cumulative basis, adjusted EBITDA to be profitable in the second half of this year as well as for 2024 and beyond. This assumes cat weather is in line with historic trends which would equate to a 41% gross loss ratio for the second half of the year. Typically, we would see better weather in Q4 than in Q3, with both of these both of those quarters much better than Q2 and Q1. So we would expect adjusted EBITDA to increase as the year comes to an end. As a reminder, claims for catastrophic weather events in excess of our long-term historic averages are excluded from guidance and from this target. We are reiterating gross written premium guidance of $500 million and as mentioned, are continuing to focus our active efforts towards constraining growth of overall premium until reinsurance and the capital markets improve with an eye toward profitability. Thank you all for your time today. And now I'll hand over to Matthew to cover our KPIs. Over to you, Matthew.