Thanks, Brad and thank you all for joining us. Today, I'd like to discuss our first quarter performance, provide some color on the overall market environment and then close with our focal points and priorities as we look to the balance of the year. I'll then turn things over to Raj for more detail on our financials as well as our outlook for the second quarter. In the first quarter, we continued to execute well in a challenging market environment, as we worked through the inventory correction that has impacted the global technology supply chain over the past few quarters. We delivered total sales of $6.9 billion, which was in line with our expectations and generated non-GAAP earnings per share of $2.41, which was above the high end of our guided range. As we take a closer look at Global Components, the cyclical nature of this business is a reality. And we're navigating through a prolonged correction as customers destock surplus inventory levels, which accumulated in response to the severe shortages that marked the industry supply chain disruptions of the pandemic era. We continue to witness the knock-on impact to the demand environment with softness across many of the markets we serve. While we still see relative strength in pockets, the broader industrial market, a meaningful portion of our overall mix remains in decline. Having said that, our customer base is stable. Our design-related activity is healthy and the leading indicators that point to the shape and duration of the cycle are definitely improving. Our book-to-bill ratios have improved steadily since late Q3 of last year across all 3 operating regions and are now approaching parity. However, backlog, which grew substantially during the shortage market environment continues to trend downward, consistent with shorter lead times, although it does remain above pre-pandemic levels. Also, cancellation activity has normalized and our visibility is improving. Broad-based market data suggests customer inventory levels at OEMs and EMS providers are declining both sequentially and year-on-year, a necessary step in the right direction. Lastly, we continue to effectively manage our own inventory in keeping with our improving visibility to changing production schedules, achieving a $390 million reduction during the first quarter. So while it's difficult to precisely predict when the demand environment will accelerate, the industry fundamentals haven't changed and we're confident in its long-standing cyclical nature for a return to growth in the near term. Now from a regional perspective, in the West, we were encouraged by design win counts that grew sequentially as customers broadly pivot from efforts to sustain existing products for a new product design and introduction activity. We also enjoyed relative strength in transportation in the Americas and aerospace and defense in EMEA. And in Asia, exiting a late quarter Chinese New Year, we did see an uptick in activity related to consumer verticals and expect better sequential performance in the second quarter. For the Global Components business overall, as we look forward to the second quarter, we expect similar sequential sales trends compared to those we saw in Q1. However, we also expect leading indicators to continue to trend positively. Now turning to Global ECS. In the first quarter, infrastructure software, cloud-related solutions and AI-enabled compute drove our overall results with softness related to large enterprise storage, networking and cybersecurity. Globally, our billings were nearly flat year-on-year and yet our recurring revenue base grew once again as we continue to see customers shift their spending patterns to offerings enabled through IT-as-a-service. This signals an encouraging trend because it will lead to improved visibility, stickier relationships and higher contribution margins over time. On a regional basis, in EMEA, we again achieved year-over-year billings and gross profit dollar growth in the quarter, driven by healthy cloud adoption and compute refresh activity. And in North America, our first quarter results reflect a mixed large enterprise IT spending environment. We continue to position our business in this region for greater mid-market scale in more infrastructure software and cloud adoption. During the quarter, we were pleased to announce significant enhancements to our digital go-to-market platform, ArrowSphere. It plays a key role in helping our suppliers and channel partners manage their journey to the markets for IT-as-a-service and solution selling and is key to the acceleration of our Line Card customer base expansion initiatives. Given the annual nature of our Global ECS business, you might recall, Q1 is typically the slowest of the year. Our second quarter outlook does call for modest improvement and operating income dollar growth year-on-year. In closing, as we continue to navigate a challenging market environment, we remain focused on the factors and variables within our control. These would include prudent management of our cost structure to keep our expense ratios in line. This will protect our selling, engineering and customer experience capacity for future growth and effective working capital management while still striving to meet the needs of our customers and suppliers. This discipline again contributed to strong cash flow during the quarter, providing us the flexibility to pursue our capital allocation priorities. And in the meantime, we remain invested in the growth priorities I highlighted last quarter while staying close to our suppliers and customers around the world. Those relationships fostered through the dedication of our global team, give me great confidence in our ability to successfully navigate this environment and capitalize on a promising future. With that, I'll hand things over to Raj.