Thank you, Jim. Please turn to Slide 9 of the presentation. As Jim mentioned earlier, the second quarter was a record for Green Brick on multiple fronts. We achieved record home closings revenue of $547 million up 20.4% year over year on a record 987 homes closed an increase of 26%. The increase in deliveries is attributable to limited competition in our infill and infill adjacent communities. Reduce cycle times and increase starts leading to higher levels of available spec inventorying. As discussed during our past earnings calls, our shift in community mix from closing out infill communities to opening new communities in surrounding infill adjacent areas, especially under our trophy brand, has moderately lowered our ASP from a year ago. In the second quarter, ASP declined slightly by 4.4% year over year to $554,000. This was our smallest decline in ASP in the past four quarters. We continue to expect ASP to be in the range of $540,000 to $560,000 for the second half of the year, subject to changes in product mix and business conditions. Another record that we broke this quarter was homebuilding gross margins, which reached 34.5% Gross margins were up 320 basis points year-over-year in 110 basis points higher than our previous record of 33.4% achieved last quarter. More importantly, homebuilding margins were strong across all builder brands, including trophy that primarily built entry-level and first-time move-up homes. As shown on Slide 4, we continue to lead our peers in gross margin performance. The gains in gross margins were due to lower incentives on closed homes year over year as a result of our infill and infill adjacent communities, and favorable construction and average lot cost. Green Brick expects that over the two years from calendar year 2023 to calendar year 2025, our average developed lot cost as a percentage of average sales price is expected to increase only 30 basis points per year. We anticipate that this expected minimal increase in our average developed lot cost will stand in contrast to our landline peers who often pay annual escalators of 6% to 7% to third-party land developers. Even worse for landline peers per John Burns research, brokers indicate that prices rose 11% year over year in Q2 ‘24 for finish lots and 10% for both undeveloped land and development costs. Back to Slide 9, SG&A as a percentage of residential units’ revenue for the second quarter improves 30 basis points year over year to 10.5%. Driven by our record gross margins on record revenues, our net income attributable to Green Brick increased 40% and diluted earnings per share for the second quarter grew 42% to $2.32 per share both records for any quarter in company history. During the quarter, we benefited from a $0.11 discrete tax benefit for equity compensation deductions. However, even excluding this discrete tax benefit, we delivered the highest EPS in company history. Net new orders in Q2 were up 4.0% year over year to 855 homes, the highest level for any second quarter in company history. Jed will further discuss our sales pace momentarily. In the second quarter, we continue to expand our footprint to position us to capture additional market share. Active selling communities at the end of the period grew 22% year-over-year to 105. In particular, our ending community count for trophy grew 41% year over year to 38%. Our cancellation rate for the second quarter remained low at 9.2%. This was, again one of the lowest cancellation rates among public homebuilding peers as shown on Slide 12. Our cancel rate remained in the historically low range under 10%, which it has been since December 31, in ‘22. As shown on Slide 10 year over year units under construction were up 23% with starts averaging 952 homes for the last four quarters. Year-to-date, we have now sold 1,926 homes delivered 1,808 homes and started 1,980 homes closely matching the sales pace and the production pace. Year-to-date, we delivered 1,808 homes generating home closings revenue of $990 million, an increase of 9.6% year over year. Home bookings gross margins increased 450 basis points to 34.0%. As a result, net income attributable to Green Brick grew 35.3% year-to-date to $189 million and diluted EPS climbed 38.0% to $4.14 for the six months ended June 30th, 2024. Next, our backlog value at the end of the second quarter increased 11% year-over-year to $650 million. Backlog is up 17% year-to-date. Now, as opposed to closing ASP, backlog ASP increase 10.1% to $732,000. Trophy a spec home builder continues to represent only 15% of the overall backlog value due to its reduced construction cycle times and quick inventory turns. Spec units under construction as a percentage of total units under construction increased slightly sequentially to 65% at the end of the second quarter as we started more spec homes. Our investment grade balance sheet continues to serve as a strong springboard for future growth. At the end of the second quarter, our net debt to total capital ratio was 10.9%, and our total debt to total capital ratio was only 17.7%. As shown on Slide 11, this level of financial leverage is running among the best of our small and mid-cap public homebuilding peers. 100% of our outstanding debt is fixed rate with a weighted average interest pay rate of 3.4%. Furthermore, at the end of the quarter, we had $133 million of cash on hand, readily available for deployment, and $360 million in undrawn lines of credit. Finally, we remained active with share buybacks during the second quarter. We bought back approximately 1.5% of our shares outstanding, valued at $38 million with a weighted average price of $55.58 per share. The remaining dollar value of shares that may yet be purchased under the 2023 repurchase plan was approximately $61.3 million as of June 30th, 2024. We continue to weigh and balance investment opportunities with share repurchases with the goal of delivering best-in-class risk-adjusted returns for shareholders over the long term. With that, I'll now turn it over to Jed. Jed?