Thanks, Owen. So during our June NAREIT meetings, the most frequent topic of conversation was our leasing activity since it obviously drives occupancy, top line revenue on our net operating income. So I'm going to focus my remarks here this morning. Owen highlighted the volume of signed leases during the second quarter. Just to remind everybody, during the last 9 months, we've been providing the leasing expectations embedded into our 2023 earnings guidance between 0.5 million and 1 million square feet per quarter which translates to 750,000 square feet on average or 3 million square feet for year 2023. So during the first quarter, we signed 660. As of the end of the first half of '23, we've completed 1.56 million square feet, pretty much on target. This quarter, the 930,000 square feet of time leases included 63 transactions, 37 renewals, 26 new tenants. There were 7 contractions and 5 expansions. Three of the expansions were law firms, although we also had two law firm contractions along with the nonprofit and a government agency. Breaking the volume down by market, 320,000 square feet in Boston, 280,000 square feet in New York, 235,000 square feet in D.C. and a 100,000 square feet in San Francisco. We ended the second quarter with an in-service occupancy of 88.3% compared to 88.6% last quarter. But as Owen said, we added 2100 Pennsylvania Avenue to the in-service portfolio. The building is 91% leased but only 61% occupied for purposes of revenue recognition, which is how we calculate our occupancy statistics. So if you exclude the additional property, our occupancy actually remains flat for that quarter. As we sit here today, we have signed leases that have yet to commence on our in-service vacancy, totaling approximately 1 million square feet with 800,000 square feet anticipated to commence in 2023. That does not include the development portfolio, which is 3.1 million square feet and 54% leased. We currently have 44 leases in negotiation totaling 1.17 million square feet as compared to about 900,000 square feet as we entered the second quarter, so a slight acceleration. The one difference in this pool of transactions is that there is one large renewal, over 300,000 square feet versus the largest active negotiation last quarter also renewal was just over 100,000 square feet. We also have a current pipeline of additional active proposals totaling over 1.7 million square feet. So if we complete 95% of the leases in negotiation and 1/3 of the 1.7 million square feet of proposals. We currently would have about 1.7 million square feet of additional leases we hope to execute during the second half of '23, which will bring our total leasing for 2023 to just over 3 million square feet, again, going back to our original embedded expectations right on target. Our remaining 2023 expiration are 1.3 million square feet. We have 800,000 square feet of signed leases with an anticipated 2023 commencement. We'll be delivering 140 Kendrick Street, 104,000 square feet into the in-service portfolio in the third quarter and 751 Gateway, 100% leased 231,000 square feet in the fourth quarter. We will have additional 2023 activity across the portfolio, which will get our occupancy up slightly by year-end. But as we get further into calendar year 2023, additional lease executions will impact occupancy after 2023. The New York regions, second-generation leasing statistics jump out this quarter and need a little bit of explanation. The deals commencing included a floor that was previously leased to an existing tenant at a below-market rent as they were rebuilding their space elsewhere in the building. We subsequently relet the space under a long-term lease to a new tenant and the impact is hitting this quarter. If you strip out that transaction, New York would be down 9.2% on a gross basis and 15% on a net basis. As I said before, in general, we continue to have roll-ups in Boston and San Francisco, roll downs in D.C. and Northern Virginia, while New York is very building and lease-specific. The leases we signed in this quarter on second-generation space were up 8% in Boston, 10% in San Francisco, down 11% in New York and down 13.5% in D.C. The New York leases signed this quarter included a 120,000 square foot renewal in Princeton that was down 28% on a cash basis. The sentiment of our own office is worse than the reality, as Owen said. To illustrate the point in our portfolio, we continue to see an incremental pickup in daily activity as we look at the month-to-month trend lines. We measure the unique client employees coming into our building every day against a number of workstation/office desks in our CBD buildings today. Using this methodology, we are seeing weekly usage of 80% in New York City, 75% in Boston and 70% in San Francisco, and this excludes Salesforce.com and WeWork because they don't use our access card system. When we look at individual firms, there is a wide discrepancy in utilization. We have clients that are close to 90% of their daily high that they had pre-pandemic. While we have a few insurance companies back office that are as low as 35% sort of making Owen's point on the type of work that's being done. The frequency at work in the office is about three days per week across our markets where we track the data, and this includes San Francisco. So that people are coming back to work, 3-plus days a week. Fridays continues to be a real outlier for our clients. Contrary to popular sentiment our clients are using their space. From a broad perspective, the office supply picture didn't improve in the second quarter. The third-party industry reports all noted negative modest absorption across all of the major markets in the United States, all of them. And you'll clearly read about high headline availability very scintillating in every market for -- in the U.S. for some time. However, continuing the theme that the sentiment is worse in the reality, the New York City brokers reports also indicate that the Class A inventory in the Park Avenue submarket has an availability rate of 11% and that net effective rents are rising with higher face rates and flat or lower concessions. And while it's not reported, the availability in the premier buildings is even tighter. Away from the Midtown market in the BXP portfolio, we are now in negotiations with our first multi-floor client at 360 Park Avenue South. Tenant demand in the San Francisco CBD has increased more than 50% since the fourth quarter of 2022, with new technology demand responsible for much of the increase. There are a significant number of AI companies actively considering space and the requirements will all create net absorption. Given their potential growth at these organizations, we would expect this demand to center on the well-built tech sublet space that is readily available in the market, not direct vacancy. Global investment in the AI field is rapidly increasing and it's going to result in job growth. San Francisco is the leading labor market for AI jobs, followed by Seattle and New York and new venture capital investment in AI is concentrated in San Francisco CBD, New York and Boston, with CBRE research reporting at San Francisco is receiving more than 50% of the total invested money during the third quarter. These are encouraging facts that can only be constructive in the eventual recovery of the San Francisco CBD office market. The concentration of user demand strength with growth still is broadly speaking, alternative asset managers, private equity, venture, hedge funds, specialized fund managers. These companies are growing their teams and capital under management. This pool of clients typically wants to occupy premier workplaces. To illustrate this point, during the quarter, we did a multi-floor 10-year renewal with our private equity firm in Boston and a 15-year renewal for a full floor with an investment manager in New York City. In general, our strongest activity as at the General Motors Building in Manhattan, 200 [indiscernible] in the Prudential Center properties in Boston, 2200 and 2100 Pennsylvania Avenue in D.C., the urban core of Reston Town Center in Northern Virginia and our Embarcadero Center assets in San Francisco. We don't have availability of Salesforce Tower ourselves directly. The loss firms are also active in our portfolio and important clients for BXP. This quarter, we completed three law firm leases in New York, one in Boston and three in our D.C. portfolio. We also have a number of active loss from transactions in the proposal stage at Embarcadero Center. In general, however, outside of Manhattan, the law firms are reducing their footprint. During the quarter, we completed three life science leases, a 55,000 square foot extension in Lexington, Massachusetts. We relet the 12,000 square foot suite at 880 Winter Street where we had a pharma biotech company shut down its operations in March. We did it on an as-is basis and the rent that was 9% higher than the prior rent. And we completed our second full floor lease at 651 Gateway in South San Francisco. We are also negotiating a third full for lease at 651 Gateway, and we intend to complete a speculative turnkey installation on an additional floor. The property will open in '24 and to date, each lease at 651 Gateway requires our partnership to complete turnkey build-outs. Activity in the life science market continues to be moderate across both Boston and South San Francisco, and there is new unleased supply being added to the market. There are a few large requirements that are touring. But as I have previously said, the bulk of the demand is from small private companies that are looking for fully built space. Our new client at 80 Winter fits this profile. I also want to note that we are seeing costs decreasing this inflation on our tenant improvement work relative to jobs completed in 2022, largely due to the falloff in transactions in our markets. The numbers are slightly different by market by market, but we are seeing a reduction in TIs that we are budgeting. BXP's portfolio is going to gain occupancy. We will continue to lease available space because our portfolio is fundamentally comprised of premier workplaces. The majority of the demand new and existing clients in the market wants to be in these types of properties and we are investing capital in our building infrastructure, amenities and tenant spaces. We are all seeing the stress that many buildings are feeling due to their current capital structure. The transition or recapitalization of these buildings is going to take an extended time. While this is happening, many of these assets are not in a position to commit capital to existing or new tenants, which greatly impacts the leasing brokers interest in considering them for their clients. And so returning to the theme of the sentiment is worse than the reality for BXP, much of the available space in our markets is not competitive with our assets and some buildings are not in a position to compete due to their owners unwillingness to invest capital while their capitalization is in the restructure mode. Our clients are using our space. Medium and small financial and professional service clients will make up the bulk of the leasing we completed in 2023. We completed 57 leases during the first quarter, 63 during the second. We have had only two leases above 100,000 square feet this year and each was a renewal. Occupancy gains will be captured slowly through lots of small- and medium-sized new leases and renewals. I'll stop here and turn the call over to Mike.