Thank you, Valter, and welcome to our second quarter 2026 earnings conference call. I'm happy to review our results and discuss why, despite the difficult market backdrop, I remain extremely optimistic for the future and why we remain well-positioned to win. The market presented two key challenges for us last quarter with both declining asset prices and treasury company multiple compression. This was reflected in our quarterly results as well as in our stock price. I'll discuss each in succession. On the former, the price of Solana fell 40% during the quarter, and it has fallen a further 31% since the quarter end. While there have been many reasons cited, including rising geopolitical risks, precious metals stealing the show, and many more, the fact of the matter is the biggest determinant of any treasury company's success has and always will be the performance of its underlying token. Thus, we are not immune, and Solana's performance had a big impact on the company. That said, I remain encouraged for three key reasons. The first is given their latency, such volatility is normal with digital assets. And Solana often exhibits large movements in both directions along a significant uptrend over time. Second, as Brian will discuss in more detail, the underlying fundamentals for Solana continue to improve as global finance moves on-chain. Here, I'm particularly optimistic because over time, price follows fundamentals. And improving fundamentals against the falling price is a recipe for greater potential upside. Lastly, as a treasury company, we have multiple mechanisms not available to native tokens or ETFs that can create value for shareholders, like accretive issuance and discounted lock token purchases. We have in the past and aim to, in the future, increase our Solana per share to help offset any decline in token price, or to add to any increase in price in an upmarket. So overall, between the volatility being expected, a positive view for potential Solana price appreciation, and our ability to increase Solana per share, we remain positive about the opportunity and continue to believe 2026 will be a strong year for Solana and Upexi. The second key challenge during the quarter was general multiple compression in the treasury space. We believe this was due to the law of supply and demand. With over 200 treasury companies, it's not hard to see why many are trading at discounts to net asset value. Despite this, I remain optimistic for so many reasons. First, I believe the subsector will work through some of its oversupply, either through M&A or from treasury companies selling their digital assets to close the discounts. Secondly, I believe there are fundamental reasons why Upexi can and should trade at a premium valuation in constructive market environments. As discussed in the past, these have to do with our multiple value accrual mechanisms which have value. Third, as we have publicly stated, we are working to increase the yield that we generate on a treasury in a risk-prudent and recurring fashion. Should we be successful, we believe this would increase our multiple, which in turn would accelerate the model and differentiate Upexi from others. Lastly, I believe we're likely to see multiple expansion in a bull market, as has been the case historically with public companies. And there are large catalysts like the potential passage of US digital asset legislation that could quickly bring this to fruition. In closing, while we have had a turbulent start to 2026, we remain positive about the future and the company has developed a strong strategic plan to, one, increase yield, two, hedge positions using maturing option markets, and lastly, capitalize on top of opportunities the volatility creates. All of these things should lead to significant growth in yield, cash flow, and stability for 2026 and beyond. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to our Chief Strategy Officer, Brian Rudick.