Thanks, Malcolm, and good morning, everyone. In the second quarter, we recorded net income attributable to common stockholders of $199.4 million, or $1.42 per diluted share, and adjusted EBITDA of $309.7 million. During the quarter, we reached an insurance settlement for $109.5 million. We included $80.8 million of the settlement in adjusted EBITDA while the remaining $28.7 million was recorded as the recovery of property and underground development that was previously a written off. This element covers all property and business interruption losses suffered at Shoal Creek last year. We received a $5.6 million advance payment in the second quarter and will receive the remaining $103.9 million this quarter. At June 30, we had $622 million of cash after acquiring Wards Well and making $113 million of income tax payments, which were both noted on our last call. During the quarter, we paid a $0.075 per share cash dividend and for the first quarter since restarting the shareholder return program we didn't repurchase shares. However, with a strong operational recovery in the second quarter and a favorable free cash flow forecast in the second half of the year, today we announced an additional $100 million available for share buybacks. And for the sixth quarter in a row, declared a $0.075 per share dividend. Turning now to second quarter segment results. Seaborne Thermal recorded $104 million in adjusted EBITDA, $10 million better than the prior quarter on much improved production from the Wambo complex, resulting an additional Newcastle quality export tons. The segment's adjusted EBITDA margin of 34% was better than the previous quarter as higher realized prices more than offset the increase in costs from a higher mix of Wambo production. The Seaborne Met segment generated $144 million of adjusted EBITDA, including the insurance settlement, or $63 million related to second quarter production, a 30% increase compared to first quarter's $48 million result in an apples-to-apples comparison. Each mine in the segment increased shipments quarter-over-quarter. And as noted earlier, we expect to collect over $100 million of cash at Shoal Creek in the third quarter. The U.S. thermal mines produced $53 million of adjusted EBITDA. The PRB shipped 15.8 million tons below first quarter's volume is expected due to the traditional second quarter shoulder season. The segment reported $17.8 million of adjusted EBITDA as the mines did an outstanding job managing costs, which despite significantly lower tons kept average unit costs flat and increased margin approximately 30% from first quarter levels to $1.13 per ton. The Other U.S. Thermal segment generated $35 million in adjusted EBITDA. Shipments increased 450,000 tons from the first quarter and we are expecting even stronger shipments in both the third and fourth quarters. Our U.S. thermal platform continues to demonstrate strong, positive margins and free cash flows. On a combined basis, the U.S. thermal operations shipped 19.5 million tons and realized an adjusted EBITDA margin of $2.73 per ton in the second quarter, after shipping 21.9 million tons and an adjusted EBITDA margin of $2.88 per ton, in the first quarter. For the first half of the year, our U.S. thermal mines have produced $116 million of adjusted EBITDA, while requiring only $17.7 million of capital. With the first half in the books, we expect robust free cash flow in the second half despite a couple of challenges. As Jim noted, we have adjusted full year guidance for three items. Seaborne thermal volume increased 500,000 tons as Wilpinjong continues to outperform expectations, particularly with the strong demand and price support for higher ash products. Seaborne net volume was reduced 600,000 tons due to the challenging geological conditions at the CMJV and the impact of two successive lock outages on the Black Warrior River at Shoal Creek. The combined volume impacts are expected to increase segment costs for the full year by $8 per ton. We lowered PRD volumes by five million tons as customer inventories remained high and natural gas prices remained stubbornly low. We have not negotiated deferrals on any of the 85 million price tons. And as we have done previously, we will manage customer volumes, while maintaining Peabody's value in all contracts. Taking a look at the third quarter, we expect another seaborne thermal order very consistent with the first two. Shipments are expected to be four million tons, including 2.5 million export tons. 600,000 tons are priced on average at $120.45, while one million tons of Newcastle product and 900,000 tons of high ash products are unpriced. Costs are anticipated to remain stable at $48 to $53 per ton. Seaborne Met shipments are expected to be 1.7 million tons at the midpoint of the first and second quarters. Lower tonnage from Q2 is due to a planned longwall move at Shoal Creek, and we should also see production and shipment levels rebalance at Metropolitan after shipments ran ahead of production by 200,000 tons in the second quarter. After the recent recovery in PCI prices, we expect to realize better prices relative to the benchmark and achieve 70% to 80% of the premium hard coking coal price. Costs are expected to be slightly better than the midpoint between the first and second quarters and land between $120 and $130 per ton. Following the traditional shoulder season and building on the momentum we experienced in the latter part of the second quarter, we expect PRB volume to increase nearly six million tons to 21.5 million in the third quarter. With higher shipments, we also expect to benefit from lower fixed cost per unit and are forecasting costs at $11.50 to $12.50 per ton, increasing margin quarter-over-quarter again to $1.75 per ton in the third quarter. Other U.S. Thermal shipments are also anticipated to be ahead of prior quarter at four million tons and costs are expected to remain flat at $44 to $48 per ton. In summary, we hit all operating targets in the second quarter, reached a key milestone by achieving first development coal at Centurion and negotiated a favorable settlement for last year's loss at Shoal Creek. The third quarter outlook is equally good. And today, we announced another $100 million available for share buybacks. Operator, I'd now like to turn the call over for questions.