Thanks, Chris. Good morning, everyone. It's my pleasure to present results for the second quarter of 2025. Before I turn it over to Larry, I'll review our financial performance and business results. Our earnings release discloses both GAAP and as-adjusted financial results. I'll be focusing primarily on our as-adjusted results. At our Investor Day last month, we communicated our ambitions for BlackRock in 2030. Our leadership team and our employees have seen and contributed to that vision over the last 2 years. We anticipated where our clients and markets were going. We've established strength at the foundation of our platform in ETFs, Aladdin, whole portfolio, fixed income, cash management. They're the strong foundations to serve clients and deliver on our organic growth objectives. We executed on organic business builds in structural growth categories, including digital assets, active ETFs, model portfolios and systematic equities, and we've executed on 3 major acquisitions. We've built a premier investment and technology platform across public and private markets, one that's only at the beginning of a durable long-term runway for growth. Building on our record results in 2024, we continue to see the proof points of the success of our strategy into 2025. We generated 7% organic base fee growth and over $650 billion of net inflows over the last 12 months. This success has been built on multiyear sustained growth in iShares, fixed income, systematic tax-managed strategies in Aladdin and now expansions in private markets. We believe these engines will enable us to more consistently rise above 5% organic base fee growth. We posted 6% organic base fee growth in the second quarter for our fourth consecutive quarter of 5% or higher organic base fee growth. We finished the second quarter with record AUM, record units of trust of $12.5 trillion. We once again delivered double-digit year-over-year growth in revenue, operating income and earnings per share. GIP V closed above its $25 billion target, making it the largest private market fund raise in the histories of both BlackRock and GIP. We took early commercial steps to bring a first-of-its-kind public-private target date solution to retirees with Great Gray, a leading collective investment trust platform. And earlier this month, we closed our acquisition of HPS Investment Partners, a major milestone as we evolve towards our ambitions of 30% revenue contribution from private markets and technology by 2030. Second quarter net inflows of $68 billion were impacted by low fee institutional index redemptions, which saw $48 billion of net outflows. Excluding that activity, BlackRock delivered approximately $116 billion of net inflows in the quarter. Turning to financial results. Second quarter revenue of $5.4 billion was 13% higher year-over-year, driven by the impact of organic growth and higher markets on average AUM, base fee is consolidated in the GIP transaction and higher technology services and subscription revenue, which includes the onboarding of Preqin. Operating income of $2.1 billion was up 12%, and earnings per share of $12.05 was 16% higher versus a year ago. EPS also reflected higher nonoperating income, a higher tax rate and a higher share count in the current quarter. Nonoperating results for the quarter included $433 million of net investment gains driven by mark-to-market noncash gains on minority investments, including Circle and in our co-invest portfolio. We own approximately 2.3 million shares of Circle common stock, which will continue to be marked through investment income going forward. Our as-adjusted tax rate for the second quarter was approximately 25%, and we continue to estimate that 25% is a reasonable projected tax run rate for the remainder of 2025. The actual effective tax rate may differ because of nonrecurring or discrete items or potential changes in tax legislation. Second quarter base fee and securities lending revenue of $4.5 billion was up 15% year-over-year, driven by the positive impact of market beta on average AUM, organic base fee growth and approximately $240 million in base fees from GIP. On an equivalent day count basis, our annualized effective fee rate was down 0.4 basis point compared to the first quarter. This was partially due to the impact of catch-up base fees associated with private markets fundraising, which were $36 million lower relative to the first quarter. Significant intra-month equity market declines in April were also a contributing factor. As a result of market and FX movements into the end of the quarter, we entered the third quarter with an estimated base fee run rate approximately 5% higher than our total base fees for the second quarter. That's excluding the impact of HPS. The closing of HPS added $165 billion of client AUM and $118 billion of fee-paying AUM on July 1. We expect HPS to add approximately $450 million of revenue, including $225 million in management fees in the third quarter of 2025. We expect HPS to positively impact BlackRock's overall effective fee rate by approximately 0.6 of a basis point. Performance fees of $94 million decreased from a year ago, reflecting lower performance revenue from private markets, liquid alternatives and long-only products. Quarterly technology services revenue and subscription revenue was up 26% compared to a year ago. Growth reflects sustained demand for our full range of Aladdin technology offerings and the impact of the Preqin transaction, which closed on March 3. Preqin added approximately $60 million to second quarter revenue. Annual contract value, or ACV, increased 32% year-over-year, including the Preqin acquisition. ACV growth increased 16% organically, also including the impact of currency exchange tailwinds. Total expense increased 14% year-over-year, reflecting higher compensation, sales asset and account expense and higher G&A. Employee compensation and benefit expense was up 12%, reflecting higher head count associated with the onboarding of GIP and Preqin employees and higher incentive compensation linked to higher operating income. G&A expense increased 16%, primarily driven by the GIP and Preqin acquisitions and higher technology spend. Sales, asset and account expense increased 14% compared to a year ago, primarily driven by higher direct fund expense and distribution costs. Direct fund expense was up 23% year-over-year, mainly due to higher average ETF AUM and net inflows. Our second quarter as-adjusted operating margin of 43.3% was down 80 basis points from a year ago, partially due to the impact of lower performance fees. We'll continue to execute on our financial framework of aligning organic growth with controllable expenses. This approach has yielded profitable growth and operating leverage in good markets, and we believe it adds more resilience to our operating margin when markets contract. We welcomed approximately 800 new colleagues to BlackRock following the close of the HPS transaction. Inclusive of the HPS acquisition impact at present, we would expect a low teens percentage increase in 2025 core G&A expense with the onboarding of GIP, Preqin and HPS as the main driver of the year-over-year core G&A increase. In addition, we'd expect our adjusted compensation to net revenue ratio to be modestly higher due to compensation associated with performance-related revenues from HPS. Our capital management strategy remains, first, to invest in our business to either scale strategic growth initiatives or drive operational efficiency and then to return excess cash to shareholders through a combination of dividends and share repurchases. At times, we may make inorganic investments where we see an opportunity to accelerate growth and support our strategic initiatives. At the closing of the HPS transaction, we issued and delivered approximately 8.5 million BlackRock SubCo units subject to 2- to 3-year lockup periods. SubCo Units are exchangeable on a one-for-one basis with BlackRock common stock. We also issued approximately 1 million BlackRock restricted stock units, primarily for retention of HPS employees. Additional SubCo Units may be issued in approximately 5 years, subject to achievement of certain post-closing conditions and financial performance milestones. If all contingent consideration is achieved, all SubCo Units are exchanged for shares of common stock and all RSUs vest and are settled as common stock, we do not expect to issue more than approximately 13.8 million additional shares of common stock in aggregate. SubCo Units issued will be included in our as-adjusted diluted shares outstanding and will be captured in our as-adjusted results going forward. We repurchased $375 million worth of common shares in the second quarter. At present, based on our capital spending plans for the year and subject to market and other conditions, we still anticipate repurchasing at least 375 million of shares per quarter for the balance of the year, consistent with our January guidance. In May, we made a minority investment and established a strategic alliance with Generation Life with the goal of developing investment solutions for Australian retirees. Last week, we announced our agreement to acquire ElmTree Funds, a real estate investment firm with $7.3 billion in client AUM, of which $3.1 billion is fee paying. The transaction is expected to close in the third quarter of 2025, subject to regulatory approvals and customary closing conditions. In the second quarter, BlackRock generated total net inflows of $68 billion. Excluding low-fee institutional index outflows, BlackRock's net inflows were $116 billion. ETF net inflows of $85 billion were diversified by channel, and over 1/3 were driven by our clients in Europe using local ranges. Fixed income ETFs led inflows with $44 billion and active ETFs and digital asset ETPs added $11 billion and $14 billion, respectively. Retail net inflows of $2 billion reflected continued strength in Aperio and our systematic liquid alternatives funds. Institutional active net inflows of $7 billion were driven by insurance client fixed income mandates and strength in infrastructure, private credit and liquid alternatives. Institutional index net outflows of $48 billion were impacted by a single client redemption of $52 billion, primarily from fixed income. Our institutional channel delivered 3% long-term organic base fee growth in the quarter, benefiting from client demand for active and alternatives. Finally, our scale and our active approach with clients around liquidity management are driving sustained growth in our cash platform. Cash AUM is up 25% over the last year, and we generated $22 billion of net inflows in the second quarter. The BlackRock platform is powered by foundational growth businesses linked to long-term growth in capital markets and fast-growing client and product channels. By combining BlackRock's capabilities with GIP, Preqin and HPS, we've laid the groundwork for an exciting future. We're already steadily delivering above 5% organic base fee growth and our new colleagues from HPS are only going to help us build from here. There is a bright future ahead to grow with clients, build great careers for our employees and deliver profitable growth for our shareholders. I'll turn it over to Larry.