Thanks, Matt. Revenue for the first quarter met expectations at the midpoint of our guidance range at $247 million. As expected, we saw sequential declines in both businesses. Units were down sequentially in the quarter. Our ASPs benefited from favorable product mix and modest price increase activity. First quarter revenue for our Industrial and Commercial business unit was $151 million, up 19% from the same period of last year. We saw year-over-year growth in Q1 in all of our major INC subcategories: industrial, smart cities and commercial with revenue from smart metering being a particularly strong growth driver, up 39% year-over-year and 16% sequentially. Home & Life revenue in the first quarter was down both sequentially and year-over-year, due to a relatively weak demand environment for Smart Home products. We continue to hear from customers regarding high inventory in the consumer space, and we expect that to normalize as customers work down their inventory balances. Despite the overall weakness in the home end markets, we continue to see durability in emerging applications within life, particularly affordable medicine. Geographically, during Q1, we saw the greatest strength in Europe, which was up both sequentially and year-on-year. Revenue was down for both the Americas and APAC regions sequentially. Our largest customer was about 3% of revenue, and our top 10 customers were only 18% of revenue, representing the broad-based nature of our customer base. Distribution revenue in Q1 was 83% of our total sales, and DSI grew in the quarter to 79-days as POS at some of our distributors was less-than-expected at the end of the quarter. We expect DSI to decline modestly in Q2. Non-GAAP gross margin for Q1 was 62.5% above our model and reflecting the modest price increase activity at the beginning of the year. These price increases were related to further input cost increases like as in Q1 of last year, though more targeted and smaller in magnitude. Non-GAAP operating expenses ended favorable to our guidance at $107 million as we reduced our hiring rate and dialed back certain flexible outside services costs. Non-GAAP operating income ended the quarter at $47 million or 19% of revenue, consistent with the fourth quarter despite lower revenue. Our non-GAAP effective tax rate was slightly higher-than-expected due to the geographical mix of income at 25.6%. Non-GAAP earnings per share ended at $1.12. On a GAAP basis, gross margin was 62.3%. GAAP operating expenses were $134 million and GAAP operating income was $20 million or 8% of sales. Stock-based compensation was $17 million and amortization of intangible assets was $7 million. GAAP earnings per share ended at $0.41, in line with expectations. Turning now to the balance sheet. We ended Q1 with $1.2 billion in cash and investments. During the quarter, we used $13 million in operating cash, primarily driven by growing our internal inventory to $133 million with turns at quarter end, declining to 2.8 times. As I commented last quarter, we have invested in strategic growth in our inventory balance to ensure we have the supply chain capacity to deliver on our growth objectives. During the quarter, we executed $14 million in share repurchases. We continue to have approximately $200 million in share repurchase authorization and intend to be opportunistic in the execution of our share repurchases. In Q1, we also issued a redemption notice on our outstanding 2025 convertible notes. We intend to settle the par value of the notes, $535 million in cash and any in the money value assignable to the notes and shares. The redemption process will be completed on June 20. We continue to have a credit facility in place at $400 million to fund strategic liquidity needs of the business such as M&A. Before I turn the call over to Matt, I'll cover guidance for the second quarter. We expect revenue for Q2 to be in the range of $238 million to $248 million. As previously described, our revenue estimate comprehends a modest reduction in distributor inventory. In Q2, our goal is to optimize the channel for efficiency and flexibility, while driving towards maximum success in customer ramps for both direct customers and a broad base of distribution customers. At the same time, we are seeing that supply and demand continue to normalize, and we are no longer facing severe capacity restrictions across process nodes. We expect non-GAAP gross margin to be between 60% and 61%. The decline in gross margin from Q1 is expected due to the effect of pricing variations similar to what we experienced last year at this time. We expect non-GAAP operating expenses to be $106 million and non-GAAP earnings to be in the range of $0.98 to $1.08 per share. We expect the non-GAAP effective tax rate to be 25%. On a GAAP basis, we expect gross margin to be about 60%. We expect GAAP operating expenses to be approximately $131 million and GAAP EPS to be in the range of $0.35 to $0.45 per share. I will now turn the call back over to Matt. Matt?