Thanks, Ryan. Good evening, everyone, and thank you for your interest in Alta Equipment Group and our second quarter 2024 financial results. Before I begin, I want to thank my Alta colleagues for their commitment and hard work during the quarter as we transition the business from the difficult operating conditions of the winter season to our busy summer months. You lead with our guiding principles daily, providing our customers with best-in-class products and service capabilities which ultimately keep their businesses in motion, thank you. My remarks today will focus on four key areas. First, I'll be presenting our second quarter results as our performance ramped as expected from the seasonally impacted Q1 and continues to transition in a moderating macro environment. Second, I'll briefly recap the refinancing that occurred in Q2 and update investors on our current balance sheet position. Third, I'd like to present two new slides that we've added to our investor deck on our customer end market exposure. And lastly, I'll discuss the updated adjusted EBITDA guidance range for 2024, which was noted in the press release today. Before I get to my talking points, it should be noted that I will be referencing slides from our investor presentation throughout the call today. I'd encourage everyone on today's call to review our presentation and our 10-Q, which is available on our investor relations website at altg.com. With that said, for the first portion of my prepared remarks and as presented in slides 11 to 13 in the earnings deck, second quarter performance. For the quarter, the company recorded revenue of $488.1 million, which is up $19.7 million versus Q2 of last year and up $46.5 million sequentially against Q1. Embedded in the $488.1 million of revenue for the quarter is a record amount of product support revenue as parts of service combined for $144.2 million in the quarter. Despite challenges on the new equipment sales line, we continue to realize organic growth in our Parts and Service departments with that figure increasing at 6.2% year-over-year. To close out the revenue lines as it relates to our rental business, we saw the natural and expected seasonal increase versus Q1 as rental revenues hit $53.7 million for the quarter, up $5.2 million from last quarter. Breaking down the segments briefly, once again, we saw a strong performance from our Material Handling segment, as equipment sales margins have held up relative to last -- sales and margins have held up relative to last year and we continue to push the pace on part service and rental lines year-over-year as those three line items were up a combined $4.3 million on an organic basis for the quarter. Notably, segment level income before tax improved in the second quarter, beating last year's quarter by $1.8 million. On to Construction, despite continued organic growth in part service and rental revenue and increased gross margins and product support, we continue to lag our prior year numbers on new and used equipment sales as those sales were down $14.7 million versus last year on an organic basis and gross margins on new and used equipment sales while flat versus Q1 were down 270 basis points year-over-year. We specifically noted moderating or delayed demand from our small-to-mid sized contractor customer base and the impact of an oversupplied competitive equipment market which once again impacted new and used equipment performance in the quarter. Additionally, as it relates to the Construction rental fleet, despite the increase in rental revenue versus last year, we were expecting better physical utilization in the quarter and will be focused on optimizing the fleet in the coming quarters as we position the balance sheet and the fleet for success heading into 2025. In the Master Distribution segment, as expected, while Q2 outperformed a disappointing Q1 by $3.9 million in revenue and $800,000 in gross margin, the segment continues to lag last year's pace, as the interest rate environment and a stocked up dealer channel continues to impact throughput to end users in the environmental processing markets. All told, on a consolidated basis we realized $50.3 million in adjusted EBITDA for the quarter, which is up $400,000 from the adjusted level of the second quarter 2023. On a trailing 12 basis, adjusted pro forma EBITDA is now $188.8 million, which converted into $105.2 million of economic EBIT as the gap between sales proceeds from rental fleet sales and the original cost of equipment widens and is impacting cash on cash returns in our rent to sell product categories. In summary, for the second quarter we are proud of the way the business bounced back from a difficult Q1 and while we continue to see growth and stability in our product support business lines, our new and used equipment sales have been impacted, we think temporarily, when compared to last year, as small-to-mid size customers in the spot equipment market are taking a wait and see approach to making additional capital investments in their businesses. Additionally, the gut of new equipment supply on the market has led to, in our opinion, a lack of discipline in terms -- in certain product categories and regions on Construction Equipment pricing which has impacted our gross margins and volumes in the quarter. Important to note and this gets to the diversity of our revenue streams, that while some customers take a wait and see approach to the next purchase, this dynamic will help taboo [Phonetic] our product support department as ours continue to accrue on aging customer equipment. Lastly, it should be noted that we were able to manage new and used inventories appropriately for the quarter as that line item on the balance sheet was reduced by $7.1 million versus Q1, indicative of our focus to stick to our equipment inventory turnover KPI's in the face of a transitioning demand backdrop and oversupplied OEMs. Now for the second portion of my prepared remarks, I wanted to briefly comment on the refinance of our first and second lien credit facilities that occurred mid-second quarter. First, we were able to amend and extend our first lien ABL facility from $485 million to $520 million and importantly, extend the facility's maturity from 2025 to 2029. Additionally, we were able to increase the size of our floor plan financing facility by $20 million and make other necessary enhancements to our first lien credit agreement given the growth in our business over the past few years. Second, we sold $500 million in 9% second lien senior secured notes maturing in 2029, proceeds of which were used to pay off the $315 million in notes that were effectively set to mature at 12/31/25 and to enhance liquidity on the balance sheet. Importantly, investors should note that the new notes, similar to the old, have no current restrictive financial covenants on the business, allowing for max operating flexibility. Effectively, this refinance of the first and second lien positions on our balance sheet pushed out an $870 million maturity wall from 12/31/25 to mid 2029 and generated approximately $150 million of liquidity for the business. As it relates to credit metrics for the quarter, given the fees and OID associated with the refinance and the updated reduced EBITDA guidance, our leverage ratio was 4.4 times 2024 forward EBITDA as of June 30, a level that we expect is temporary and manageable as we focus to pare down on underutilized inventory and reduce rent to self fleet categories in the second half. From a liquidity perspective, given the refinance, the business now has approximately $300 million in liquidity on the ABL revolver as of June 30, providing for plenty of flexibility to continue and execute in any macro environment that lies ahead. For the third portion of my prepared remarks, I'd like to point investors to slides 26 and 27 of our investor deck, which present an analytical estimate of the breakdown of Alta's revenues by end market segment. A couple of notes on the slides; first, our end market diversification is something we have always been proud of and have spoken to in the past, and I'm now pleased to be able to provide investors with more specifics on that diversity. As you will see in the slides, the overall theme is that despite the names of our segments, Material Handling and Construction, which monikers relate to the type of products sold in those verticals, our vast customer base and product offerings take us to an enviable position on the diversification of our end markets. As an example, on slide 26 in the Material Handling segment, investors will note that one the largest end market for the segment is the defensive Food & Beverage category, which accounts for an estimated 15% of the segments revenue. Two, beyond Food & Beverage, the next 70% of our Material Handling revenue comes from 16 distinct zipcode [Phonetic] categories that each have multiple subcategories and range from automotive manufacturing to medical supplies distribution, to municipalities and education, to chemical and paper manufacturing, to wholesale and retail distribution and logistics, to name a few. On the Construction segment on slide 27, a couple of notes here. One, road builders and contracts tied to infrastructure spending represents a healthy cross section of our customer base and should help provide stability for years to come, giving all the things that play in that arena. Two, our industrial roots in the mid-west are evident and reflected in the categories such as manufacturing, scrap and demolition. Three, note that a combined 18% of the Construction segment revenue is coming from what are effectively municipalities and utilities, and four, a combined 14% of our business is related to agricultural and forestry and aggregate and mining, with the bulk of that exposure coming from our latest acquisition of Ault in Canada. In summary, we believe our end market diversification is an advantage for us both from a risk mitigation and commercial perspective, as our teams are constantly gaining insights, sharing ideas, and ultimately cross selling our products and solutions offerings across a wide spectrum of end markets. Now, for the last portion of my prepared remarks, I want to present our insights on our updated EBITDA guidance for 2024. In terms of the number, we now expect to report $190 to $200 million of adjusted EBITDA for the full year 2024. A few observations; first, headwinds. As many industry participants have noted, deliveries of new Construction Equipment to customers in North America is down meaningfully in the first half of 2024, which runs counter to expectations of a flat to modest growth year in equipment sales when we entered 2024. As mentioned, we've seen this impact most acutely with our small-and-midsized contractor customers, as the references to higher interest rates and uncertainties surrounding the election have gotten more pronounced, as the year has gone on. The dip in the market has impacted the new use equipment line in the Construction segment and at Ecoverse more than our internal risk adjusted models expected, and we suspect pressure will continue to be evident in the second half of 2024. Additionally, the oversupply of equipment in the construction markets has led to compressed gross margins in new equipment. As mentioned previously, we have observed what we term to be undisciplined competitive pricing in certain product categories and regions. It follows that to compete and hold the valuable share that we've earned over the years, we've had to accept skinnier than historic margins on equipment deals. Again, this margin compression has outpaced our risk adjusted internal models and we suspect the pressure to continue so long as the overhang and supply in the industry persists. Lastly, the two above factors have led to less than anticipated utilization of our rental fleet and despite the seasonal ramp -- and the seasonal ramp in Q2, while notable, wasn't as steep as we expected and out of line with the size fleet we're carrying. That said, given our rent to sell business model, specifically in the Construction segment, we expect to quickly right size the fleet in the coming quarters and to get back in line with our utilization targets and the demand for rental fleet in our markets. Now some tailwinds as we head to the second half. First, our Material Handling segment has had a good first half of 2024, and we expect to have a strong second half and continue to sell -- as we continue to sell out of a solid backlog and take market share in key geographies and product classes. Additionally, we expect the Peaklogix business to ramp as interest rates come in. In fact, recent activity at peak supports this thesis. Second, as Ryan mentioned, we're expecting notable revenue from the eMobility segment in the second half of 2024 as the work associated with credentialing ourselves and developing relationship with commercial EV and charging OEMs in the over the road space starts to bear fruit. Lastly, given some of the challenges we faced on the revenue and gross margin lines in the first half of 2024, we've taken proactive measures to manage down our overhead costs and are actively looking for ways to automate and drive cost out of the business, which will help the business in the second half of the year and over the long term. In closing, I would say that we remain bullish about our long term prospects at Alta and that we believe some of the current dynamics in the market today could prove to be transitory. In the meantime, Ryan and I and our 3000 teammates look forward to the challenge in front of us [Indiscernible] in the market share gains to help offset a potentially weaker macro environment, creating new revenue streams in emerging business lines like eMobility and cost and fleet optimization to position the business for further success, as we look forward to a strong 2025. Thanks for your time and attention and I'll turn it back over to the operator for Q&A.