Gail M. Peck
Thank you, Antonio. Good morning, everyone. I'll start with Construction Products segment on Slide 10, which reported record revenues and segment adjusted EBITDA. Second quarter revenues increased 28%, and adjusted segment EBITDA increased 44%, driven by the accretive contribution from Stavola. Margin expanded 310 basis points to 28.3%. The acquisition integration is progressing very well, and Stavola's second quarter performance demonstrates its premium financial attributes, delivering a 39% adjusted EBITDA margin for the quarter, despite a significant increase in rainfall days in the New York, New Jersey MSA during the quarter compared to the prior year. On an organic basis, higher overall pricing was offset by reduced volumes and cost absorption, as wet weather impacted many of our key markets. While weather has been a headwind in the first 6 months of the year, we are pleased to see year-to-date organic adjusted EBITDA margin for the segment up slightly year-over-year. As Antonio mentioned, we are expanding our disclosures for our Aggregates business to better align with our construction materials peers. An additional table has been added to the earnings release that provides volumes, average selling price and unit profitability metrics for our largest construction materials business. As a reminder, last quarter, we began breaking out revenue for Aggregates, and we are pleased to increase transparency to highlight the quality of our platform. For our Aggregates business, freight-adjusted revenues increased 15% and adjusted cash gross profit increased 21% during the quarter, expanding margin by 250 basis points. Total volumes increased 6%, as the addition of Stavola more than offset lower organic volumes. On a unit basis, freight-adjusted average sales price per ton increased 8% to $17.83 and adjusted cash gross profit per ton increased 15% to $8.24. Organically, pricing was up mid-single digits, in line with expectations. Above average rainfall was a factor throughout the quarter in most of our markets, reducing the number of available workdays. With lower production volumes, our teams focused on maintenance and repair activities during the quarter, which reduced cost absorption, but should improve margin in the second half of the year. With more normalized weather patterns in July, we experienced strong double-digit volume growth in our Aggregates business supported by Stavola and solid organic growth, which underpins our confidence in the second half of the year. Turning to Specialty Materials and Asphalt. Revenues effectively doubled, primarily reflecting the Stavola acquisition. Stavola's Asphalt business performed well during the quarter with margins slightly ahead of expectations. In Specialty Materials, higher pricing was offset by lower volumes, resulting in flat adjusted EBITDA year-over-year. Finally, revenues for our trench shoring business were down due to lower volumes and a reduction in steel prices, which decreased average selling prices. Adjusted EBITDA declined in line with revenue, and margin was unchanged. Customer sentiment for our shoring business remains positive. Moving to Engineered Structures on Slide 11. As previously mentioned, we have now broken out revenues into 2 line items: Utility and Related Structures and Wind Towers. We provide backlog information on a stand-alone basis as well. In the second quarter, segment revenue increased 7% due to higher Wind Tower volumes from our New Mexico plant, which began delivering towers in the second quarter of last year and is now fully ramped to its planned production. Revenues from utility and related structures decreased 2%, in line with expectations. Significant double-digit volume growth in our steel utility poles and improved product mix were offset by lower steel prices, which reduced average pricing. Adjusted segment EBITDA increased 31%, and margin expanded 350 basis points to a record 18.7%. The earnings growth was about evenly split between Utility and Related Structures and Wind Towers. We ended the quarter with a record backlog for Utility and Related Structures of $450 million, up 9% from the start of the year, as we continue to see strong order activity. Our production visibility for this business is supported by our reported backlog as well as customer reservations for future capacity. For Wind Towers, we ended the quarter with backlog of almost $600 million, down 23% from the start of the year, as we continue to deliver on our existing orders. As a reminder, our backlog extends into 2028 at our New Mexico facility. Turning to Transportation Products on Slide 12. Revenues were up 18%, and adjusted segment EBITDA increased 10%, excluding steel components from the prior year period. The growth was driven by higher tank barge volumes, partially offset by lower hopper barge deliveries. Margin for the business declined 110 basis points, in line with expectations based on product mix. We expect to see sequential margin improvement in the second half. During the second quarter, barge orders totaled $33 million, primarily for hopper barges for 2025 delivery. We ended the quarter with backlog of $277 million, in line with the start of the year. Order activity increased subsequent to quarter end, and we have solidified our production plans for 2025. I'll now provide some comments on our cash flow performance and leverage position on Slide 13. Second quarter operating cash flow was $61 million, a sequential improvement from the first quarter's breakeven cash flow. Working capital was a $76 million use of cash, primarily driven by higher receivables due to the seasonal ramp in construction and increased inventory supporting our Utility Structures business. Looking at working capital days, we are pleased with the significant reduction from the second quarter last year. CapEx for the second quarter was $28 million, down $20 million from the prior period, as we are primarily investing in maintenance CapEx this year. For the full year, we now see CapEx of $145 million to $155 million, which lowers the top end by $10 million, reflecting the expected timing of investment. Free cash flow for the quarter was $39 million, we expect free cash flow to improve, as we move into the second half of the year. We continue to make progress deleveraging the balance sheet following the Stavola acquisition. Second quarter's 2.8x net debt to adjusted EBITDA is down over a 0.5 turn from when we closed the transaction last October due to strong earnings growth. With higher anticipated cash flow, we expect to begin reducing debt during the second half of the year. Our liquidity remains strong at $890 million, including full availability under our $700 million revolver, and we have no material near-term debt maturities. I will now turn the call over to Antonio for an update on our 2025 outlook.