Thanks, Toby. Our strong second quarter results and free cash flow generation drove continued deleveraging of our balance sheet. We exited the quarter with $7.8 billion of net debt, down approximately $350 million compared to Q1 and marking nearly $6 billion of debt reduction over the past 3 quarters. The recent closing of the Olympus transaction accelerates our deleveraging plan and enhances our debt to free cash flow metrics. Pro forma the transaction, we remain on track to achieve our year-end 2025 net debt target of $7.5 billion. Over the medium to long term, we plan to operate with a maximum of $5 billion of net debt, which is roughly 3x free cash flow before strategic growth CapEx at a $2.75 natural gas price. As a result, we will continue to focus on debt paydown, even after achieving this near-term $7.5 billion target. In higher parts of the commodity cycle, we plan to accumulate cash on the balance sheet and drive net debt well below $5 billion, creating significant flexibility for countercyclical buybacks and to build capacity for high confidence reinvestment and growth even during the low parts of the commodity cycle. Turning to our recently announced pipeline of growth projects. We expect these projects to create a collective growth CapEx opportunity of approximately $1 billion over the next several years, and we expect to begin spending capital on associated infrastructure in 2026 with investments spaced out over a multiyear period. We structured the 2 data center projects as Index-plus style deals on fixed volume commitments. Similar to our existing contracts with the Southeastern utilities, these contracts give us confidence in leaning into moderate, midstream and upstream growth due to the lower risk nature of these agreements. Similarly, the midstream growth projects were all backed by fixed fee contracts and minimum volume commitments, providing low-risk, high-return earnings growth pathways for EQT. While we cannot disclose specific contract terms or end customers, before the impact of upstream volume growth or basis tightening, we expect these projects to add approximately $250 million of recurring free cash flow by 2029. Initially, we will reallocate volumes to fill this new demand, followed by steady, mid-single-digit multiyear growth. We have the capacity to grow production by at least 2 Bcf per day to backfill these volumes, which means we've set the stage to responsibly grow the business by at least 30% over the coming years. These sustainable growth opportunities distinguish EQT among industry peers, while also providing unmatched risk-adjusted exposure to natural gas prices. Furthermore, we are as confident as ever that Appalachian basis should structurally tighten through the end of the decade, and we indexed the supply deals to local pricing points to benefit from this uplift relative to Henry Hub, in addition to the contractual premium. Turning to capital allocation. As we achieve our deleveraging goals and organically grow the business, we will measure our free cash flow available to invest after the deduction of maintenance CapEx only. Of that remaining bucket of free cash flow, we plan to allocate first dollars toward high-return, low-risk sustainable growth projects like the ones discussed today. These large projects follow on the heels of the strategic growth investments in water infrastructure and compression that we have made over the past 2 years and are now the key drivers of the operating efficiency gains and outperformance we've become accustomed to seeing in our quarterly results. We expect this high return reinvestment to drive sustainable earnings growth which should enable us to confidently grow our base dividend and ensure it is bulletproof in all parts of the commodity cycle. Beyond organic growth and our base dividend, we plan to use excess free cash flow opportunistically to further reduce debt, patiently build up cash or opportunistically buy back a significant amount of shares during the market down cycle. Turning to hedging. We tactically added a modest amount of hedges for the upcoming winter to take advantage of call skew in the options market. We hedged 10% of costless collars for December through February at an average price floor just above $4 per MMBtu and an average ceiling price around $7 per MMBtu. Note our updated hedge table also includes hedges that were novated with the Olympus acquisition, covering approximately 5% of our production through Q1 2027. We will continue to patiently look for hedging opportunities like this and position EQT to realize higher-than-average gas prices through the cycle. Turning to natural gas macro, while there are near-term headwinds primarily due to production growth, we continue to hold a structurally bullish view for prices as we look out to 2026 and 2027. First, on the supply side, there is growing evidence that associated gas growth is slowing. The oil-directed rig count has declined by approximately 50 rigs or roughly 11% since April. While Brent and WTI pricing has rebounded off their April and May lows, we believe global oil markets still lean towards oversupply, particularly given OPEC's strategy to rapidly add back barrels and defend market share. That backdrop suggests U.S. oil activity will remain subdued into next year as operators stay disciplined and focused on shareholder returns. Critically, this curbs a major source of incremental gas supply. At the same time, the demand picture continues to strengthen as we expect a meaningful step-up in LNG exports by Q4 with Plaquemines LNG reaching full rate and Golden Pass LNG beginning operation. This increase is on top of the 2.5 Bcf per day of LNG demand growth we've seen since the beginning of 2025 and should quickly tighten balances, especially as U.S. dry gas supply struggles to keep pace. Based on recent and upcoming FIDs, U.S. nameplate LNG capacity should grow to north of 30 Bcf per day by 2030, which we believe will drive structurally higher U.S. pricing next decade. At the same time, Qatar recently delayed the in-service of their new LNG capacity from early to mid-2026, further increasing our bullish near-term outlook. Due to surge in gas production, the current market is loose with storage levels 6% above normal, but this environment is self-correcting. Lower pricing in the near term should disincentivize dry gas producers, who are chasing prices by increasing activity, especially in the marginal Haynesville play, where well productivity is beginning to degrade, a clear sign of inventory exhaustion. Shifting to guidance. We have issued an updated outlook pro forma the Olympus transaction. Our updated 2025 production guidance range is 2,300 to 2,400 Bcfe, which includes approximately 100 Bcfe of production contribution from Olympus in the second half of the year. We are lowering our operating expense guidance range by approximately $0.06 per Mcfe, driven by accretion from the Olympus transaction and continued base business outperformance, while keeping price differential guidance unchanged. As you recall, last quarter, we reduced our full year capital guidance as tangible evidence of efficiency gains. Despite the acquisition of Olympus on July 1, and the associated $100 million of incremental second half spending, we are maintaining our full year capital guidance range of $2.3 billion to $2.45 billion. This is once again a tangible representation of continued efficiency gains within our base business, which without Olympus would have driven our capital spending well below the low end of guidance. All told, production is up, operating costs are down, and capital efficiency continues to improve. And finally, we have modestly increased capital contributions to equity method investments, reflecting our decision to preorder the compression horsepower for MVP boost due to the growing backlog for this equipment. Note this is not an increase in CapEx, but simply a decision to pull forward an existing expenditure from 2026 into 2025. And with that, I will turn the call back over to Toby for some concluding remarks.