Thank you, Tom, and good morning, everyone. As I review the second quarter results, please refer to the supplemental slides or the MD&A for further details. Our MD&A is included in the Form 10-Q that was filed with the SEC this morning and provides a discussion of our comparative second quarter results. A link to that filing can also be found on our website. Consistent with the first quarter, our strong financial performance in the second quarter was driven by the diverse and countercyclical mix of our business segments along with continued growth in our higher margin operating segments. The highly recurring nature of our business model also remains strong with almost 59% of adjusted gross profit in Q2 coming from monthly fees or revenues that are not dependent on transactions or bankcard volume. I'd also highlight our organic growth rates which continue to outperform compared to many industry competitors. If you adjust for the impact of Plastiq, which was not part of our financial results in Q2 of last year as well as for the impact of the large reseller that we've discussed on prior calls, Priority had year-over-year organic growth in Q2 of 17.5% for revenue 18.9% for adjusted gross profit and 25.7% for adjusted EBITDA. When you combine those industry-leading organic growth rates with a scaled business that produces a high level of recurring gross profit, you can easily understand why we're excited about our business and the value that we believe has been built at Priority. Before moving to the segment-level financial results, I want to take a minute to discuss a change in our reporting metrics for this quarter and going forward. Historically, we provided revenue, adjusted gross profit and operating income at the segment level. As you'll note in today's presentation, we still provide revenue and adjusted gross profit, but now report adjusted EBITDA at the segment level instead of operating income. We've made this change, because the business continues to evolve and we want to ensure that the greatest possible transparency into our core results. In that regard, as we continue to implement a shared services operating model in our business along with managing a single unified commerce engine across our payments infrastructure, the allocation of certain operating and technology costs becomes less identifiable. So we will report those costs in Corporate with only direct costs for each segment having an impact on its adjusted EBITDA results. We've included reconciliations in the earnings release to help you compare current quarter results to historical quarterly results on a comparable basis. With that explanation, I'll now move to the segment level results for the SMB segment on slide 8. SMB generated Q2 revenue of $155.1 million, which is $7.2 million or 4.8% higher than the prior year second quarter. As discussed on prior calls, a large reselling partner started to diversify their processing activity in Q2 of 2023 and concluded that effort in Q4 of last year. The year-over-year impact of that ended this quarter and was just over $8 million of revenue, which is down from the $21 million headwind that we saw in Q1. We do not expect future impacts from this reseller on a comparative basis. And excluding its impact this quarter, the SMB business experienced a 12.2% organic revenue growth on a year-over-year basis. Bankcard dollar volume in SMB was $15.8 billion for the quarter, which increased 4.6% from $15.1 billion in the comparable quarter last year. As an additional point to emphasize the strength of organic sales in the SMB segment, if you adjust for the impact of the aforementioned reseller, bankcard dollar volume increased 9% in the quarter compared to the prior year. From a merchant standpoint, we averaged 179,000 accounts during the quarter, higher than 177,000 average in Q1 of this year while new monthly boards averaged 3,900 during the quarter, which is consistent with the comparable quarter of last year. Adjusted gross profit in SMB for the second quarter was $35.6 million, which is up 1% from last year's second quarter but a $3.7 million or 11.8% increase from Q1 of this year. Gross margins of 23% in the quarter were down from 23.9% in last year's second quarter, but up over 80 basis points sequentially from Q1 of this year. Lastly for SMB, quarterly adjusted EBITDA of $28.6 million was up slightly from the prior year second quarter and is up $3.6 million or 14.3% sequentially from Q1 of this year as we continue to manage operating expenses within our business, which results in a strong flow through of incremental adjusted gross profit to adjusted EBITDA. Moving to B2B. Revenue of $21.9 million was an increase of $18.9 million from the prior year. Plastiq, which joined Priority in Q3 of last year contributed $17.8 million of the increase during the quarter while CPX grew by $1.4 million or 49% on a year-over-year basis. Those increases were partially offset by a $200,000 reduction in the remainder of the B2B business. Adjusted gross profit in B2B increased to $5.6 million from $2.3 million in Q2 of as a result of the Plastiq acquisition combined with over 25% growth in gross profit for the CPX business unit. For the quarter, gross margins were 25.4% or 3.6% lower compared to 29% in the first quarter of 2024. The lower margins in Q2 were a result of changes in mix of business and the timing of certain incentive fees in Q1 of this year which flowed through at a high margin and did not have a comparative benefit in Q2. As a reminder, the sequential comparison is a more relevant metric until Q4 of this year given the year-over-year comparison of margins is impacted by the timing of the Plastiq acquisition and Plastiq's GAAP reporting requirements for revenue recognition which was discussed in prior earnings calls. The B2B segment had $1.5 million of adjusted EBITDA in the quarter compared to $600,000 in Q2 of last year. On a year-over-year basis the growth was largely related to Plastiq, but also included 17% growth in CPX's adjusted EBITDA. Moving to the Enterprise segment. Q2 revenue of $43.7 million was an increase of $12.2 million or 38.9% and from $31.4 million in the prior year. Favorable trends from the past several quarters in new monthly enrollments and billed clients combined with an increase in the number of Passport program managers growth in deposit balances and the stable interest rate environment all contributed to strong revenue growth. As a reminder, there is a countercyclical aspect to portions of the Enterprise segment that should continue to benefit us if the economy does end up having more of a hard landing. As a result of the strong revenue growth, adjusted gross profit for the Enterprise segment increased by 38% to $40.6 million while adjusted gross profit margins were 92.9% in the quarter compared to 93.3% in the second quarter of 2023. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $37.2 million which is up 45% from $25.7 million in last year's second quarter. Moving to consolidated operating expenses. Salaries and benefits of $22.1 million increased by $3 million or 16% compared to Q2 of last year which was largely due to the addition of Plastiq in Q3 of 2023. However on a sequential quarterly basis, salary and benefits remained flat due to our continued focus on expense discipline. We finished the quarter with approximately 990 employees which is compared to approximately 980 at the end of Q1 2024 and 930 at the end of Q2 of last year. SG&A of $11.2 million increased by less than $450,000 a from $10.8 million in Q2 of 2023 and was relatively flat with the $11 million in the first quarter of this year. Depreciation and amortization of $15.2 million for the quarter decreased by $2.7 million from last year, but is comparable to D&A in Q1 of this year and is consistent with our quarterly expectations for the balance of this year. Moving to the next slide. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $51.6 million which is another new quarterly record for Priority and was an increase of almost 26% from $41.1 million in Q2 of 2023 and an 11% sequential increase from $46.3 million in Q1 of this year. Interest expense of $21.7 million for the quarter increased $3.9 million from Q2 2023 levels as a result of acquisition-related debt increases during Q3 of last year combined with the broader recapitalization we closed in Q2 of this year. As seen on page 13 and discussed on our Q1 earnings call we refinanced our debt during the quarter on more favorable terms and also upsized the credit facilities with the excess proceeds used for a partial redemption of our preferred stock. The new credit facilities consist of a $70 million revolving credit facility and an $835 million term loan with pricing that is 100 basis points lower than our previous rate. Proceeds from the new term loan were used to refinance the prior senior debt, pay related fees and expenses and redeem $170 million of the preferred stock including $3.7 million of accrued but unpaid dividends. The net impact of the refinancing results in over $6 million of annualized free cash flow improvement as we lowered the cash dividends on the preferred stock and pay a lower interest rate on the debt but pay that lower rate on a larger quantum of debt. Further the related reduction in dividends on the preferred stock results in a $22 million annualized increase in net income available to common shareholders. As we move through the back half of the year, we will continue to evaluate our capital structure while seeking ways to further optimize our balance sheet and cost of capital. From a liquidity standpoint, we ended the quarter with all $70 million of borrowing capacity available under our new revolving credit facility and $34.6 million of unrestricted cash on the balance sheet. For the LTM period ended June 30 adjusted EBITDA of $187.5 million represents over $10 million of sequential quarterly growth from $177 million at the end of Q1. Preferred stock on our balance sheet totaled $105.7 million at June 30, net of $5.9 million of unaccreted discounts and issuance costs. The second quarter preferred dividend of $8.4 million, included $5.1 million paid in cash and $3.4 million of a PIK component. As I mentioned earlier, $3.7 million of the dividend was accrued and paid in conjunction with the May refinancing. It's important to note that the refinancing closed mid-quarter. So the go-forward dividend on the lower amount of preferred stock will be closer to $4.8 million in Q3, with increases from there based on the PIK component. Before turning the call back over to Tom for his closing comments, I'd like to further address our revised financial guidance for the full year. As Tom noted in his opening remarks, we have narrowed our revenue and adjusted profit full year guidance to the low end of the range that we originally established in our earnings call in March of this year. However, we are raising our adjusted EBITDA guidance to a new range of $196 million to $200 million. I'm sure everyone has already done the quick math to figure out that if we just repeat the first half of the year in Q3 and Q4, we'll meet the new adjusted EBITDA guidance. However, there are a couple of factors that will result in increased operating expenses in Q3 and Q4. First, we became an accelerated filer at the end of the second quarter based on our public float calculation. So we will incur increased expenses related to SOX 404 compliance. In addition, we continue to migrate certain platforms to the cloud, which will convert certain CapEx items to OpEx, but will have minimal impact on our net cash flow. Those combined expenses will both accelerate in the back half of this year and apply some pressure to adjusted EBITDA, which is why you aren't seeing an even higher range for our revised full year guidance. To be clear, though, we are going to continue to maintain our expense discipline and focus on generating a high flow-through from gross profit to the bottom line. With that, I'll now turn the call back over to Tom for his closing comments.