Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. As Steve mentioned, we delivered another strong quarter of growth across all key metrics due to a stable demand environment for our equipment and services, improvement in product supply and supply chain-related costs and the benefit of price and cost actions taken last year. Starting with revenue, the momentum in sales growth we experienced in the second half of last year carried over to start this year. In Q1, we posted the fourth consecutive quarter of constant currency growth in total revenue and the third consecutive quarter of constant currency growth in both equipment and post sales revenue. Revenue growth this quarter of 2.8% at actual currency was negatively impacted by 270 basis point of currency headwinds and reflected improved product supplies, healthy equipment order flows and growth in contractual print and digital services. Turning to profitability. We delivered a second consecutive quarter of year-over-year improvement in growth on operating profit margins driven by higher equipment sales and favorable mix, price increases, lower logistic costs and a reduction in operating expense, including a $23 million reduction in bad debt expense. Gross margin improved 250 basis points over the prior year quarter, mainly driven by lower supply chain-related costs, benefits associated with price and cost action taken in 2022, currency and improved product mix. These benefits were partially offset by ongoing product cost increases. Adjusted operating margin of 6.9% increased 710 basis points year-over-year, driven by 380 basis points from cost reduction actions, 250 basis points of supply chain-related cost improvement, 130 basis points from lower bad debt expense and 90 basis points from price increases. Partially offsetting this benefit were effect from currency. Adjusted other expenses net were $10 million lower year-over-year due to lower net interest expenses associated with lower core debt, partially offset by $11 million of currency losses in the current quarter. Adjusted tax rate was 15.5% compared to 52.9% in the same quarter last year. The decrease in tax rate reflects benefit in the current quarter from the redetermination of certain unrecognized tax positions on nonrecurring benefit in the prior year quarter. Adjusted EPS of $0.49 in the first quarter was $0.61 higher than the prior year, driven by higher adjusted operating income, lower net interest expense on the lower tax rate, partially offset by currency. GAAP earnings per share of $0.43 was $0.81 higher due to the same factors as well as a contract termination expense in the prior year quarter. Let me now review revenue, cash flow and profitability in more detail. Turning to revenue, equipment sales of $391 million in Q1 grew 27% year-over-year in constant currency, or roughly 25% in actual currency. Growth was driven by better availability of product in both the Americas and EMEA, particularly for our higher-margin A3 device and color production equipment. Backlog declined for the third consecutive quarter as supply chain conditions further normalize. We expect our backlog to return to typical levels, which range from $100 million to $125 million by the end of Q2. Equipment revenue outpaced installation this quarter due to a greater mix of Office A3 and production equipment as well as the continued benefit of price increases. Installation growth was strongest for our high-margin, mid-range product on color production equipment. Entry for installation were down slightly year-over-year due to the stoppage of shipments of Russia and the ongoing normalization of work-from-home trends. Post sale revenue of $1.32 billion grew 0.5% in constant currency year-over-year and declined 2.2% in actual currency. Post sales growth in constant currency was driven by growth in consumable and contractual print and digital services, including the acquisition of Go Inspire, partially offset by lower sales of IT hardware. Contractual print and digital services, our largest and most stable source of revenue, has grown as a consistent pace at constant currency for more than a year despite only a modest return of workers to the office or macro uncertainty due in large part to the expansion of our digital services offerings and price increases. Growth this quarter was further aided by an improvement in office-related print activity. Geographically, both regions grew mid-single-digit in constant currency. EMEA grew slightly faster than the Americas due to stronger post sales growth, including the prior year acquisition of Go Inspire. Let’s now review cash flow. Free cash flow was $70 million in Q1, higher by $20 million year-over-year. Operating cash flow was $78 million in Q1 compared to $66 million in the prior year. Working capital was a use of cash of $66 million, resulting in $159 million year-over-year decrease in cash flow, driven by a reduction in accounts payable and a larger use of cash for inventory, reflecting greater product availability, strategic buying action and positioning ahead of Q2. The unfavorable timing of other liability payment also resulted in a greater use of operating cash this quarter. Positively offsetting this effect were higher operating income on the net source of cash from finance receivable. Finance assets activity was a source of cash this quarter of $120 million compared to a source of cash of $5 million in the prior year, reflecting the benefit of our recently signed receivable funding program with HPS, partially offset by higher operating lease placements. Investing activity were a use of cash of $17 million compared to a use of cash of $75 million in the prior year due to lower M&A activity and lower CapEx. Financing activity consumed $505 million of cash this quarter, which includes the payment of the remaining $300 million of 2023 notes and approximately $150 million of secured debt. During the quarter, we paid dividends totaling $45 million and did not repurchase any shares. Turning to profitability. Q1 adjusted operating profit margin expanded 710 basis points year-over-year for reasons previously discussed. We are carefully monitoring our cost base in the context of macro uncertainty. As Steve mentioned, profitability improvement this quarter reflects the ongoing benefit associated with operating discipline instilled by Project Own It in prior years. We also benefited from strategic actions taken in 2022 to make our cost base more flexible. While we are not providing an official cost savings target for 2023, we do expect to deliver low- to mid-single-digit of gross operating cost efficiency for the year, driven by our culture of continuous improvement on specific cost reductions. These efficiencies are expected to support margin growth in 2023 despite an expected increase in product cost. We are confident in our ability to more than offset fit your [ph] product cost increases through ongoing contractual price increases, a more flexible cost structure, future business simplification effort on greater diversification of product sourcing. Turning to segment. FITTLE origination volume grew 57% year-over-year. Captive product originations were up 59% on higher Xerox equipment revenue, particularly in the mid-market. Non-captive channel origination, which includes third-party dealers and non-Xerox vendors, grew 55%, a function of growth in new dealer relationships and third-party equipment origination. Despite the continued growth in origination activity, FITTLE finance assets were down 3% sequentially in actual currency due to the runoff of existing finance receivable on HPS funding of close to 50% of FITTLE Q1 origination. FITTLE revenue declined 3% in Q1, mainly due to a reduction in operating lease revenue, which reflect lower Xerox equipment installs in prior period. This decline was partially offset by higher fees, including those associated with the new receivable funding agreement. Segment profit was $12 million, down $5 million year-over-year due to a decline in revenue, higher intersegment commission and higher borrowing costs, partially offset by lower bad debt expense. Segment margin was 7.9%, down 310 basis points year-over-year. Print and Other revenue grew 4.1% in Q1. Print and Other segment profit improved $126 million versus the prior year quarter, resulting in an 810 basis points expansion in segment profit margin year-over-year, driven by improved product supplies, lower logistic cost mix and the benefit of price and cost actions taken last year. Turning to capital structure. Net core cash of around $200 million was down from the prior quarter. We ended Q1 with around $700 million of cash, cash equivalent and restricted cash, a reduction from Q4 level mainly due to the $300 million repayment of our 2023 notes and roughly $150 million of secured debt. $2.8 billion of the remaining $3.3 billion of our outstanding debt is allocated to on support FITTLE lease portfolio, with the remaining debt of around $500 million attributable to the core business. Total debt consists of senior unsecured bonds on finance asset securitization. We have a balanced bond maturity ladder over the next few years with no debt coming due over the next 12 months. Finally, I will address guidance. Our outlook for revenue remains unchanged at flat to down low single digits and continue to reflect a stable demand environment with some contingency for potential macroeconomics weakness. Regarding operating margin, Q1 operating profit margin benefited from a favorable equipment revenue mix, which is expected to normalize across Q2 on future quarter. Q1 profit margin also benefited from a credit to bad debt and lower labor cost associated with a higher-than-expected number of open position. This benefit may not repeat in future quarter. That said, we are increasing adjusting operating income margin guidance from at least 4.7% to a range of 5% to 5.5%. The increase in margin guidance reflects better-than-expected Q1 profitability even after excluding the previously mentioned item as well as the success of ongoing efficiency programs, partially offset by greater-than-expected unfavorable currency, which mainly affect profit in Q2. The indicated range of profit margin outcomes largely reflects the degree to which macroeconomic uncertainty could affect our operating profit for the year. We did not change free cash flow guidance, but no changes were made to our assumption of free cash flow conversion, which is still expected to be 90% to 100% of adjusted operating income, excluding finance receivable activity. We’ll now open the line for Q&A.