Thanks, Gordon. The second quarter could become a turnaround point for the Fed in its fight on inflation initiated just over two years ago. Overcoming months of mixed economic data, May and June consumer prices finally affirmed the disinflationary trend toward the Fed's 2% annual inflation goal. Cooling prices, along with a rising unemployment rate, set the market expectations for the start of an easing cycle to commence at the September 18 FOMC meeting. The market is currently pricing in 2.5 cuts this year and another 4.5 cuts by the end of 2025. While we acknowledge that the trajectory of economic activity has shifted notably, we continue to evaluate each month's data and remain cautious against pricing in too deep of a cutting cycle. We can all recall a bit of overenthusiasm on the path of rate cuts last year. The yield on a 10-year to U.S. Treasury closed the second quarter at 4.4% after reaching 4.7% in early April, and as of July 26 is at just above 4.2%, the first quarter closing level. Mortgage-backed securities remain range-bound between roughly 135 and 155 basis points in nominal spread this quarter. Despite an overall range-bound environment in the second quarter, intra-quarter trading remained choppy. MBS nominal spreads finished the second quarter 10 basis points wider while the SOFR swap rate in the intermediate and longer part of the curve shifted 12 to 15 basis points above their respective marks at the end of the first quarter. These factors were the driving contributors to our negative 4.8% economic return in the second quarter. As of July 22, average book value was $0.2037 per share after accounting for July's dividend of $0.24. Looking ahead, we expect lower rates and eventual normalization of the yield curve to provide exceptionally strong tailwinds to the MBS market, the mortgage REIT sector, and ARMOUR REIT specifically. A full 25 basis point cut in the official overnight rate will flush out the cash sitting in short funds and overnight reverse repo facility into high-quality assets like U.S. MBS. It won't happen overnight, but with every subsequent interest rate cut, this momentum will build and multiply. We expect bank portfolios to follow a similar strategy. Owning mortgages right now is in many cases a negative carry versus short-term borrowing rates. Yet we've already seen bank demand flip positive for the first time since 2022. Once the 25 basis point cut is implemented, MBS carry will turn decisively positive and provide an even greater momentum to MBS demand from banks. We're noting similar strong inflows in the MBS mutual funds and ETFs this year and expect them to persist into the cutting cycle as flows in the fixed income accelerate. So taking all these factors together, we expect the Fed's actions to have a very profound impact on us in the markets. We believe we could see mortgage spreads move 10 to 15 basis points tighter into the yearend, but the path there will not be a straight line. So we continue to stay disciplined in the way we approach leverage and putting cash to work. Now I'd like to ask Desmond Macauley to give some more detail on our mortgage strategy and how it has evolved this quarter. Desmond?