Thank you, Sameer. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter fiscal year 2023 conference call. I'll begin with a review of our business highlights from the quarter and a discussion of our first quarter results, followed by a summary of our business strategy. Todd Schull, our CFO, will follow with an overview of our Q1 2023 financial performance and our Q2 2023 guidance. We will then open the call to your questions. The quarter's results are also shown on Slide 3 of the investor presentation posted on TTM's website. In the first quarter of 2023, revenues were below the guided range due to demand softness in our commercial markets and supply chain challenges that made us unable to meet strong demand in the aerospace and defense end market. But as a result of better product mix and cost controls, non-GAAP EPS was within the guided range. Demand in our aerospace and defense market remains strong with continued record backlog, offset by weaker demand in our commercial end markets. As we look into Q2, inventory adjustments and demand softness in our commercial markets continue, but at a lesser extent, resulting in bookings stabilizing, albeit at low levels. And we continue to see strong demand in our A&D market, which now represents 40% of our revenues. I would now like to provide a strategic update. TTM is on a journey to transform our business to be less cyclical and more differentiated. Over the past several years, TTM has consistently emphasized that a key part of our strategy is to add value to the product solutions that we deliver to our customers, particularly in the aerospace and defense market. In 2018, we acquired Anaren, which broadened TTM's product portfolio into highly engineered RF components and subassemblies as well as adding critical RF engineering capability and resources. In 2022, we acquired Telephonics, which builds on Anaren and TTM's customer-driven culture and disciplined approach to engineering and manufacturing. The addition of Telephonics expands TTM's aerospace and defense product offering vertically into higher-level engineered system solutions and horizontally into the surveillance and communications markets while strengthening our position in radar systems. As a result of these strategic moves, over 50% of A&D revenues are from engineered and integrated electronic products with PCBs being less than 50% of the overall contribution. Another important element of our differentiation strategy is the current construction of a new state-of-the-art, highly automated PCB manufacturing facility in Penang, Malaysia. The decision to build this new factory is a direct response to our customers' increasing concerns about supply chain resiliency and regional diversification-- and, in particular, the need for advanced multilayer PCB sourcing options in locations outside of China. The new facility in Malaysia will assist customers in our commercial markets, such as networking, data center computing and medical, industrial and instrumentation. We continue to make progress on the Malaysian facility, and we have hired over 50 engineers, most of whom are currently training in our China facilities. Finally, I'd like to update you on the consolidation of our manufacturing footprint. We previously announced our plan to close 3 small manufacturing facilities in order to improve total plant utilization, operational performance, customer focus and profitability. PCB manufacturing operations in Anaheim and Santa Clara, California and Hong Kong will be closed and consolidated into TTM's remaining facilities. The plant closures are expected to improve both facility and talent utilization across our footprint, resulting in improved profitability. We remain on track with closing the Hong Kong facility by the end of our second quarter and the 2 North America facilities by the end of the year. Customers have been supportive of the consolidation, and we expect to retain the majority of the business at the closed facilities. We also completed the sale of our Shanghai backplane assembly facility or BPA, at the end of March. This facility accounted for approximately $45 million in revenue in 2022 and an immaterial amount of operating income. We are glad to have found an excellent home for our employees with the buyer, DBG Technology Co., Ltd, which specializes in assembly work and will be intent on servicing and growing the customer base for this facility. Now I'd like to review our end markets, which are referenced on Page 4 of the earnings presentation on our website. The aerospace and defense end market represented 43% of total first quarter sales compared to 30% of Q1 2022 sales and 40% of sales in Q4 2022. The majority of the year-on-year growth was due to the inclusion of Telephonics. Excluding that impact, our Q1 A&D revenues grew 7% year-on-year organically. We continue to experience a positive defense climate, with our A&D program backlog at $1.38 billion, including Telephonics. The solid demand in the defense market is a result of a positive tailwind in defense budgets, our strong strategic program alignment and key bookings for ongoing franchise programs. During the quarter, we saw significant bookings for key programs, including the scalable agile beam radar, or SABR for F-16 fighter jets and SPY-7 radar for Japan's Aegis system equipped vessel, or AESA program. While the demand picture continues to look favorable, we are experiencing supply chain challenges due to the complexity of the supply chain, including a number of smaller organizations that are struggling to meet the lead time requirements of TTM and our customers. We expect to make steady progress in this area throughout 2023, and we expect sales in Q2 from this end market to represent about 45% of our total sales. In terms of the defense budget backdrop, the administration released preliminary details of the fiscal 2024 President's budget request, or PBR, in early March. The fiscal 2024 DoD budget request is an increase of 3% over the fiscal 2023 enacted funding. During the quarter, President Biden and Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, announced a partnership and $50 million in government funding to strengthen advanced packaging for semiconductors and printed circuit boards in North America. In addition, the White House announced a presidential determination invoking the Defense Production Act to cover printed circuit boards and advanced packaging production capability. These actions demonstrate the increasing attention that the printed circuit board industry is receiving as a critical component of the aerospace and defense supply chain and the increased need for supply chain resiliency. We will continue to work with our customers to ensure that our leadership position in North America printed circuit board production meets their present and future needs. The medical industrial instrumentation end market contributed 19% of our total sales in the first quarter compared to 21% in the year-ago quarter and 17% in the fourth quarter of 2022. A number of our customers have been reducing inventory as well as quick-turning business. In addition, the Instrumentation segment is weighted towards the semiconductor capital equipment market, which is seeing weaker demand. For the second quarter, we expect MI&I to be 18% of revenues. Automotive sales represented 17% of total sales during the first quarter of 2023 compared to 20% in the year ago quarter and 16% during the fourth quarter of 2022. The sequential decline for automotive was due to inventory adjustments and semiconductor shortages that have been impacting automotive OEM production as well as a reduced number of working days due to Chinese New Year. We expect our automotive business to contribute 18% of total sales in Q2. Networking accounted for 11% of revenue during the first quarter of 2023. This compares to 13% in the first quarter of 2022 and 13% of revenue in the fourth quarter of 2022. Here too, demand was softer as customers focus on inventory digestion. In Q2, we expect this end market to be 8% of revenue as revenues associated with the sold Shanghai BPA facility are no longer included in this end market. Shanghai BPA contributed approximately $8 million of revenue to this end market in Q1 of 2023. Sales in the data center computing end market represented 10% of total sales in the first quarter compared to 16% in Q1 of 2022 and 14% in the fourth quarter of 2022. The weaker demand in data center computing was primarily due to inventory digestion at our data center customers and ongoing weakness in the semiconductor market. We expect revenues in this end market to represent approximately 11% of second quarter sales as orders and revenues stabilize. Next, I'll cover some details from the first quarter. This information is also available on Page 5 of our earnings presentation. During the quarter, our advanced technology and engineered products business, which includes HDI, rigid-flex, RF subsystems and components and Engineered Systems accounted for approximately 41% of our revenue. This compares to approximately 33% in the year ago quarter and 39% in Q4. We are continuing to pursue new business opportunities and increase customer design engagement activities that will leverage our advanced technology and engineered products capabilities in new programs and new markets. PCB capacity utilization in Asia Pacific was 52% in Q1 compared to 78% in the year ago quarter and 69% in Q4. Our overall PCB capacity utilization in North America was 39% in Q1 compared to 49% in the year ago quarter and 41% in Q4. Note we have a theme of every year, we update our utilization methodology calculation and have restated the previous year and quarters utilization for a like-like comparison. The lower rate in Asia Pacific was caused by a decline in production volumes as well as lower working days from the Chinese New Year holiday, while the lower year-over-year rate in North America was due to additional plating capacity added as well as a greater mix of higher technology product that requires less plating. Our top 5 customers contributed 36% of total sales in the first quarter of 2023, the same as in the fourth quarter of 2023. We had one customer over 10% in the quarter. At the end of Q1, our 90-day backlog, not including Telephonics, which is subject to cancellations, was $429.1 million compared to $605.3 million at the end of the first quarter last year. Including Telephonics, our backlog at the end of Q1 was $482.2 million. Our book-to-bill ratio, including Telephonics was 0.82 for the 3 months ended April 3, reflecting a stronger aerospace and defense book-to-bill offset by weaker commercial bookings. Our A&D bookings also ship over a longer period of time compared to our commercial bookings. As we look into Q2, we are seeing our commercial markets continue to be soft with bookings stabilizing at lower levels. On the A&D side of our business, we continue to focus on making incremental improvements in shipments as we work with supply chain partners to loosen bottlenecks and take advantage of an improving labor market. I am confident that with the effort of our employees, we will be able to overcome these challenges as we work our way through 2023, in the meantime, I wish to thank our employees for continuing to contribute to TTM and our critical mission of inspiring innovation for our customers. Now Todd will review our financial performance for the first quarter. Todd?