Jeffrey W. Clarke
Thanks, Paul, and thanks, everyone, for joining us. We had a strong operational execution in the second quarter with record AI shipments. Our revenue was a record $29.8 billion, up 19%. ISG and CSG were up 22%. Earnings per share increased by 19% to $2.32, marking a Q2 record. Our modernization work continues to enable internal efficiencies, driving decoupling of revenue growth and operational expenses, which were down 4% while continuing to invest in R&D. This strong performance resulted in another quarter of robust cash generation and significant capital returns to shareholders. Now let's move to AI, which remains a significant tailwind. We continue to see strong demand for AI servers, building on the exceptional demand observed in Q1. We booked $5.6 billion in orders in the second quarter and shipped a record $8.2 billion, resulting in an ending backlog of $11.7 billion. For context, we have shipped more AI servers in the first half of this year than all of last. Our 5-quarter pipeline continued to grow sequentially with double-digit growth across enterprise and sovereign opportunities. Our pipeline remains multiples of our backlog. Enterprise orders and our buyer base grew sequentially in Q2, distributed across various industries such as financial services, health care and manufacturing. And we're seeing strong enterprise interest in our new NVIDIA RTX Pro 6000 AI Factory solutions. These turnkey solutions provide the performance, flexibility and power efficiency enterprises need to manage the entire AI life cycle at any scale with air-cooled and PCIe options available. As I mentioned last quarter, our execution in AI continues to be a key differentiator. We are innovating at an unprecedented pace, engineering at scale solutions for customers while remaining agile to rapidly changing customer road maps and architectures. We were the first in the world to ship both the NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 solution last year and the GB300 NVL72 in July to CoreWeave, 2 great examples of our speed to market in an environment where speed matters. Customers are seeing real-time the value in our ability to deploy large-scale clusters quickly and reliability. Our execution, value-add through engineering and ability to Dell design and even Dell manufacture components within our at-scale data center solutions drive margin rate improvement within AI. In traditional servers, revenue grew again. We now have 6 consecutive quarters of year-over-year P&L growth. From a demand perspective, international markets grew, but the April weakness we saw in North America continued. TRUs grew double digits as customers prioritize richly configured servers given their focus on density and power efficiency driven by a higher mix of our 16th generation servers. We have completed the launch of our 17th generation portfolio of servers designed for ultimate performance, reliability and security, giving customers the ability to consolidate workloads to make room for AI and to drive broader data center efficiencies. There's still significant opportunity ahead as over 70% of the installed base is running on 14th generation servers or older. In storage, revenue was down 3% and demand moderated. We saw double-digit demand growth in PowerStore, which has grown 6 consecutive quarters, 5 of those up double digits, fueled by very strong channel participation. Within PowerStore, 46% of the buyers were new PowerStore customers and 23% were new to Dell storage. All-flash storage saw strong growth, driven by strength in our all- flash offerings across PowerMax, PowerStore, PowerScale and ObjectScale. Our focus remains on driving not only growth but also expanding profitability and storage by increasing our mix of Dell IP storage and improving margins within each product. In CSG, we saw momentum continue, although not at the pace we expected. Overall, CSG was up 1% and commercial was up 2%. We now have 4 consecutive quarters of P&L growth, 6 consecutive quarters of demand growth in commercial. Commercial demand grew double digits in EMEA with continued growth in North America and APJ but to a lower extent. We saw strong demand growth across small and medium business, which helped drive profitability improvement. Consumer revenue declined 7%, but profitability improved as we did a better job on positioning our products. Plus, we are in a deflationary environment. We expect moderate growth as the PC refresh continues, driven by an aging installed base and the Windows 10 end of life, which is now 48 days away. To fully seize the refresh opportunity, we have taken steps to improve execution and expand our PC TAM. For example, just this morning, we launched a new business notebook specifically designed to win the entry-level commercial PC market. This is indicative of the fast strategic actions we're taking to drive growth and gain share while operating within our 5% to 7% long-term profitability targets. In closing, I'll wrap it up by saying we are pleased with our overall performance. We had another strong quarter with record revenue. EPS grew well above our long-term value creation framework. We generated strong cash and shareholder return, and we are building a better company with our modernization work. Our innovation engine is firing on all cylinders, and the opportunity is showing no signs of slowing down, with the AI hardware and services TAM expected to double from $184 billion last year to $356 billion in 2028. And we are doing the work internally to adapt rapidly to evolving customer needs. We really like our hand. Now let me turn it over to Yvonne to talk about Q2 in more detail.