Perfect. Thanks, Nadir. So, hello, everybody. My name is Jay Giraud and I’m the Founder and CEO at Damon Motors. For the last handful of years, we’ve been hard at work defining and designing what we believe will become the future of motorcycling. The company idea really began in the summer of 2016, when I spent several days riding a motorcycle in downtown Jakarta, Indonesia. I was there for my best friend’s wedding and in the crowd of about 10 million people, many riding a motorcycle every day. In cities like Jakarta, like many people there, I had a little motorcycle accident. But thankfully, I wasn’t injured. Not too much, just my ego, mainly. And I spent the next several days of my trip in Jakarta thinking very differently about the everyday citizens of that city. As I rode around every day on a motorbike, as everyone does there, I realized how strange it was to me that the car companies that make millions of safe cars also make millions of unsafe motorcycles and that the technology used to make those cars safer has not really trickled down in any way into the motorcycle industry at large. So into my research then I started to learn that 1.5 billion people every single day depend on a powered motorcycle to get from A to B in these cities that are so congested in many ways, they really have no other alternative and how to get around. So how do we make motorcycling safer, and how do we improve air quality for this group of commuters that exist in these big cities that generally have a pretty poor air quality? I learned quickly on that motorcycles then outsell cars two to one every single year, annually. In fact, they’re the second largest emitter of greenhouse gas emissions in the world, right behind heavy duty trucks. So all of that really led me to realize it was time to set a new standard in motorcycling. So I set a goal for Damon to become the world leader for safer, smarter motorcycles. Now, I know that what you’re looking at on the screen doesn’t exactly look like the average motorcycle for someone living in Jakarta or Mexico City. So it’s important here to understand that just like the many EV companies before Tesla, there have been many EV motorbike companies before Damon that failed to take flight. And that could be for many reasons. But I’ll argue it’s for one simple reason alone, and that’s because nobody wants to trade down in life. Tesla was the first car company to make an EV that was better than whatever car you already have in your driveway. They made EVs aspirational. And by developing an entirely new powertrain system, and by solving real world problems inherent in motorcycling today, we believe we’ve done the same thing. So because of the high cost of developing new technology that requires us to start at the top of the market, like Tesla did, making us the highly aspirational player in the space as well. And so, very much like Tesla, we’re taking the approach where we can revolutionize motorcycling by first developing the fastest, most powerful and longest range and safest motorcycle we can that is intended to meet the needs of every day western enthusiasts. We’ve also built an exciting brand that we believe can cause a transformation from the west out to the east, and eventually around the world. So I’m going to present to you the Damon HyperSport, our flagship product that’s capable of outperforming really any of the kind of motorcycles we’ve seen in the world today. [Video Presentation] Hopefully, this video is playing for you guys. [Video Presentation] All right. So that’s the demo video of our flagship product, the Damon HyperSport. The bike has been designed from the ground up. Almost every inch of this thing has been engineered to deliver some of the highest performance ever achieved of any motorcycle in the world. The Damon HyperSport delivers 200 horsepower, 200 Newton-metres of torque and maintains over 200 miles of combined city highway range per charge. It also has DC fast charge capability built in and will also be compatible with Tesla Superchargers. In 2023, WIRED Magazine became the first media outlet to ride it on the track back to back against the best BMW superbike you can buy. And they said the Damon effectively screams at full acceleration, a high pitched shriek from the HyperDrive’s electric motor and internal gear set, it sounds like nothing more or less than the future, and you can read that article on WIRED Magazine from the July issue of 2023 goes on with lots of detail about how great the bike is. So it’s these points on the left of the slide here that have made the company really special. Our bike is 100% electric and is capable of meeting or exceeding the performance of the best Ducati’s, BMW’s, and Honda superbikes you can buy. We’ve also developed CoPilot, one of the world’s first collision warning systems for motorcycles. The team and I have been working on it to a level of production readiness, having tested it with over 100 local riders, with the Chief of the Police of LAPD, and 12 of their officers in downtown LA traffic, and with chief engineers from Kawasaki, Honda, Suzuki have all tested our CoPilot system, and it really makes a difference. We’ll talk about more of that in a little bit. We’ve also so far received over $85 million in consumer credit card backed reservations for the HyperSport that you see on the screen here. We’ve generated and raised over $70 million to date, and we have 34 patents or patents pending across 13 jurisdictions around the world. And we’ve won 14 major awards. Awards like the Best of the Best of Automotive Innovation by CES, CNET, Robb Report, Fast Company, Popular Science, The Thomas Edison Award for Innovation, and so on. And we have a pretty fantastic group of people on our team that I’m very lucky to be surrounded by. A little bit about myself. I’ve been in the automotive industry now for 15 years. In 2003, I decided that I wanted to spend the rest of my life helping to get the world off oil. So in 2008, I figured the best way to do that was to build electric vehicles, and I founded a company called REV Technologies. We made high performance electric SUVs and pickup trucks on Ford chassis. Some of our major customers included U.S. and Canadian municipalities, utility companies. We also won several DOB contracts funded by TARDEC in partnership with major military contractors such as SAIC and Honeywell Aerospace. Then in 2012, I founded a company called Mojio, making internet connected hardware and software platform that grew to become one of the largest platforms for consumers in the automotive industry today. Mojio now has millions of subscribers in nine countries around the world in partnership with seven wireless carriers like Deutsche Telekom, T-Mobile, MetroPCS, Telus, Rogers and Bell, and has taken significant investment from quite a few strategic investors like TELUS Ventures, T-Mobile, Deutsche Telekom, Bosch, and many others. To my right is Derek Dorresteyn. He’s our CTO and a champion motorcycle racer. He has decades of experience designing and developing high voltage, high performance electric motorcycles and dirt bikes under the name Alta Motors. Amber Spencer, to his right, was our fifth hire who joined Damon, also a motorcycle racer. She built all of our marketing systems that drove the order book to what it is today. And to her right is Michael Galbraith, he’s our CFO. He has decades of experience growing BlackBerry from 200 to 20,000 people as SVP Operations and Finance over a course of about 13 years. And the rest of the team, there’s 50 some odd more of us has collectively 300 years’ experience, designing, developing and manufacturing a whole line of vehicles, from electric and gas, dirt bikes to electric and gas race cars, fuel cell cars for Honda, to high performance cars like McLarens, to electric cars like Tesla, electric buses, and even vertical takeoff aircraft for Uber Elevate. So really a diverse set of combustion, hydrogen fuel cell and electric vehicle design development and manufacturing experience, even setting up automotive factories and manufacturing plants around the world. So all of that know-how really lends itself to some pretty successful innovations that we’ll talk about shortly. Now, on the Board, we have myself, of course, and then Alex Spiro to my right, who’s been on the Board now for about two years. Mr. Spiro is Elon Musk’s personal lawyer. And we have Greg Capelli and Jack Clariond, who have decades of family office and public equity and private equity experience, as well as decades of experience running public companies. Howie Wu joined the company during our Series A. He has decades of consumer electronic experience with companies at Aquantia, Sony Ericsson, and startups of his own. Now, below that, some of our more notable financial investors include Franklin Templeton, who was an early investor in Tesla, the Ford Motor cars family office Fontinalis, and two prolific Canadian VCs, Round13 and House of Lithium. Some of our strategic investors include Indika, which is the power utility for Indonesia. They signed on to become the national distributor for Damon Motorcycles in Indonesia, which is the third largest motorcycle market in the world. Now, Auteco is the largest manufacturer of motorcycles in Latin America, and they too have signed on to become a distributor for Damon in five countries of Latin America. SINBON is one of our component manufacturers in Taiwan. And the Deeley Group is the family office that owned Harley-Davidson Canada for 100 years. So some pretty significant strategic experience and support to help the company become successful. Now, you can probably appreciate, as many of you are probably thinking, that motorcycling is a huge market, and it certainly is. There’s about 180 million motorcycles sold annually. That’s nearly twice the volume of cars. But as you would expect, many of those motorcycles are pretty low cost commodity vehicles. And that’s not a market that Damon wants to play in. We’re going to stay in a highway capable motorcycle market, which is in the $3,000 price point and up. And so for us, that’s about a $43 billion market, which we believe is absolutely primed for disruption, totally underserved in terms of really showing off an electric vehicle leader that we expect to become. So we’re going to serve that market with two platforms based upon this design. These are the core pillars that this system we call HyperDrive. HyperDrive is novel in quite a few ways. It’s a 500 volts liquid cooled structural battery. So the battery itself acts as the frame of the bike, and it’s engineered in the shape of a motorcycle. Everything you see between the tires, this reverse C-shape is filled with over 1,000 lithium-ion batteries that we get from a world class supplier. And they’re liquid cooled and wrapped in this aluminum shell. So you don’t see a motorcycle frame because the battery is the frame. All of this results in higher power, less weight and lower cost. The proprietary 150 kilowatt motor in the middle spins up to 18,000 RPM, generating over 200 horse power. And it’s bolted right into the middle as you can see. We’ve wrapped the shape of the pack around the motor for optimal weight balancing and performance. The result of this is astounding. HyperSport delivers 3.5x the power to weight ratio of a Tesla Model 3 performance. And it handles like a MotoGP superbike. Now, the charger sits right on top, and the high power inverter sits in the front for easy service and repair. Key features of this is that we’ve written all of our own code. So all of the onboard software, the firmware, even the Cloud Damon work together as one seamless intelligent system. That means we can update all of our bikes over the air and fix any software issues before they become a problem. So, as a single platform HyperDrive is completely modular, so the HyperDrive on the left here. We can rapidly enter more and more market segments in a lower price point simply by changing the body work, by reducing the number of cells in the pack, by reducing the power with software, and by changing the way it looks and feels with different suspension and plastic, all at a fraction of the cost of building HyperDrive itself. So none of this is possible in the combustion motorcycle industry today, where typically they have to build new frames, new transmissions, and new engines that have to be rebuilt and retooled to make different size motorbikes. So that makes, for Damon, a much more capital efficient way of testing and developing a whole new range of motorcycles and allowing us to rapidly take over more market share in many motorcycle segments. HyperDrive is going to serve the $19,000 to $40,000 price points, with the average price so far being around $28,000, which is on par with the top of the line Ducati. And now that we’re readying this design for production, we’re working on the early design for HyperLite over on the right to serve the world segments. This is the system that Indika and Auteco were final assemble in their domestic regions to serve the world markets under the Damon name. Again, wrapping HyperLite in different size and styles of bikes so that we can penetrate those markets very quickly as well. Now, as I mentioned earlier, Damon really stands apart in the motorcycle industry by having focused on making motorcycling safer. So, CoPilot is really special. CoPilot is a novel array of collision warning sensors and proprietary software. We have a radar and a camera in the front of the bike, and we have a radar and a camera on the back that are seamlessly integrated into the motorbike. Now, motorcycles don’t move anything like a car, which is the main reason why we’ve never seen collision warning systems on motorbikes before. Unlike cars, motorcycles lean to a very steep degree as they pass through turns, and they float between the white lines of a lane because they’re so narrow, and they can also pitch forward during hard braking. So these collision warning sensors on a motorbike are often pointed at the ground or pointed at the sky. So our CoPilot software is designed to adjust to what these sensors are seeing in real-time, which allows them to keep a level of field around the bike, regardless of what the bike is doing. So if you can imagine, this gray SUV in the picture here is braking hard while you’re looking over your shoulder at the white car climbing a lane change, what you’re going to get is a forward collision warning delivered to the rider with a haptic vibration in the handlebar and a red LED light at the top of the 7-inch display that you see below, giving you that one extra second you need to react. This warning alerts the rider to react, and with more time to react, the rider has more time to brake or swerve to avoid danger. Now, we’ve collected over 40,000 miles of this data, and as I said before, we’ve had dozens of people from the LAPD and over 100 local riders test this system, and it just works. It’s really effective. So in addition to the vibrating helmet bars, a red LED light illuminates and augments the haptic forward collision warning. Now, CoPilot also delivers blind spot warnings on the right and left of the 7-inch proprietary display, and it can show you everything behind you while you ride as well using the rear facing camera. CoPilot also has built-in GPS, LTE, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi so we can ingest and store up to 500 gigabytes of data on board and transmit it to the Damon Cloud to build a safer and deliver safer and smarter algorithms back to all Damon bikes over the air. This means the more you ride a Damon motorcycle, the safer and smarter all Damon riders become. In the future, we’ll also have pay per month features that we’re really excited to launch. So it’s really game changing and nothing like this has been developed for motorcycles before as far as we know. The other thing that you motorcyclists out there will appreciate is that we all know that motorcycling gets pretty uncomfortable after a while. So Damon bikes adjust in real-time to the traffic conditions at the push of a button. So while you’re riding the bike, you could be at highway speed, bent over, going fast, leaning and having lots of fun. And then as you get into heavy dense traffic, you can push a button and your handlebars will electronically lift up and your feet – foot pegs will drop, putting you in a more upright junior riding position. So for riders, this is like having two bikes in one, and it really just changes the game. It’s tremendously exciting when you experience an adjustable motorcycle for the first time, especially for those riders out there who are constantly uncomfortable on a bike. Now, all of these novel features, including our AI cloud, our CoPilot system, our adjustable ergonomics, will all be available on a whole line of motorcycles, ranging from the sport bike category that we plan to enter into first, and then into the largest segment, the commuter category, finally into the fastest growing segment, which is the adventure bike category. Our bikes will be priced between $19,000 and $40,000, as I said, with the average price point of our reservations being at $28,000. Now, it’s important to note that the cost of building electric motorbikes is a small fraction of the cost of building a car. But we’re generating price points similar to that of a car company. For example, these Ducati’s and BMWs that you see below are priced between $20,000 and $45,000. BMW, for example, sells more than 40,000 units a year of some of these bikes. It’s also worth noting that the capital intensity of building a bike is many times more capital efficient than the capital intensity of building a car company. It isn’t burdened by the heavy cost of crash testing or building out a half mile of robots that car manufacturing requires. Also, unlike car manufacturing, motorcycle DOT certification is a self-certification process. So we have a very streamlined path towards production in front of us now. Waiting for these slides. Here we go. So now, about 73% of our order books is generated out of the U.S. – sorry, in the U.S., I should say mainly in California, Florida and Texas. Over the course of 2025 – 2024 to 2025, we expect to be doing most of our shipments into California first. We also have signed agreements with Vanwall, Auteco and Indika that could generate potentially another $250 million in revenue in the coming years. And then we do have orders outside of the U.S., as you can see in Canada, Europe, the UK and the rest of the world. But we’re really going to focus our priority shipments into the U.S. first. Now, this is the most important slide, if you ask me. Surveys of our reservation holders show that the people ordering Damon bikes are on average 20 years younger than the American average motorcyclist, which means all of our competitors, from Yamaha to Ducati, Honda, et cetera, are still selling to people in their 40s, 50s and 60s, whereas we’re selling to people in their 20s, 30s and 40s. People who are entering motorcycling today, many don’t learn how to change gears in a car. That’s just gone with the past, making it much more intimidating to think about getting a motorbike and having to learn how to change cheap gears on one of those. An electric motorbike with no gears that’s safer, that has a collision warning system, that doesn’t generate emissions, that’s cheaper to operate, is all really exciting, which is why we’re seeing such demand in our reservations. Now, in the bottom left here, 39% of people ordering a Damon bike are pretty serious riders. They own two or more bikes. Interestingly, though, a quarter of them don’t own a bike at all and some of them don’t even have a license. So we are obviously filling a gap in the market that’s never been filled before and that’s really a big deal. Secondly, we see that 55% of people ordering our bikes are coming up from much cheaper commuter bikes. So we’re drawing customers up from lower cost segments in order to get what you can’t find anywhere else in the industry right now. This has happened once before in the auto industry, and that’s with Tesla, what’s been called the Tesla Effect, which is thoroughly talked about and studied on the internet, showing that the most commonly traded in – the car most commonly traded in for a $55,000 Tesla Model Y is a Toyota that’s worth $20,000 to such an extent that the Model Y dethroned the Corolla as the best-selling car in the world. Now, when you look at the kind of bikes our customers own, over in the pie on the right, the top nine out of 10 of them are combustion engine motorcycle brands. So we’re really excited about the opportunity to take real market share away from the legacy players like Yamaha, Ducati, Honda and so on. So our design is done and the major technological risks are behind us now. The next stage is production. As part of this financing use of funds, we’re going to kick off the tools purchasing for production start initially in San Rafael, California. We’re setting it up as our new product introduction center, where we plan to build-out the first 1,000 motorcycles before duplicating that manufacturing process into a higher volume assembly plant in 2025. So, as we’ve discussed earlier and summarized here, we believe our performance, safety features, reservations, patents and thought leadership all position us really strongly for the future. And beyond WIRED Magazine’s test ride, we plan to be running major test ride events and customer test ride events next year as well as part of our process for generating more reservations and converting them. This isn’t all of our awards. This is just some of them. We kind of didn’t want to crush too many onto the screen here, but you can check out some of our notable awards that we’re pretty excited to have won. And we’re really excited about the potential to become publicly traded. Motorcyclists are intensely passionate about riding. It’s like a religion for them. And for as long as motorcycles have existed, riders have dreamed of owning a piece of motorcycle history. But besides Harley-Davidson and Livewire, there really aren’t any publicly traded motorcycle companies to compare us to. As a company so focused on building out the industry’s future, we think the dream of being part of our growth and success has finally arrived. By becoming a publicly traded company, we’re giving millions of people access, a chance to own a part of the future of motorcycling, and allowing their passion to have a voice that gets heard. So together, we get to make motorcycle history as we make two-wheel mobility cleaner, smarter, and safer for the world. And I’m really looking forward to sharing this journey with all of you as well. And with that, I’ll turn it back to Nadir. Thank you.