Thanks, Mark, and good morning, everyone. System wide RevPAR increased 4.7% led by increased business and group travel. In the United States, RevPAR increased over 2%, reflecting the timing of Easter and strong results from group business transient travel. Large corporate accounts contributed to both group and business transient travel, benefiting hotels in major urban markets. As Mark noted, we are lapping challenging comparisons in Maui due to the wildfires in the third quarter last year, and we have several resorts undergoing exciting transformational renovations. The Confidante is being rebranded as Andaz Miami Beach, while Hyatt Regency Scottsdale and Hyatt Regency Indian Wells will be rebranded under the Grand Hyatt brand later this year after extensive renovations. RevPAR growth in the Americas, excluding the United States, increased approximately 9% with notable strength in Canada and South America, while our all-inclusive properties in the Americas had net package RevPAR growth of 2% for the quarter. In Greater China, RevPAR decreased by approximately 3%. As a reminder, the second quarter of last year saw a dramatic recovery for domestic travel, and RevPAR surpassed pre-pandemic levels for the first time. We expected growth rates to normalize starting in the second quarter this year. However, unfavorable macro conditions, and greater outbound Chinese travel negatively impacted results in the quarter. Domestic travel was down 9% in the quarter compared to last year, with a notable impact on hotels in secondary and tertiary markets. While we saw a positive RevPAR growth in most major markets, this could not offset weaker demand in secondary and tertiary markets. Despite these pressures, we increased our RevPAR index by approximately 3% during the quarter, which is a testament to our strong brand recognition in China. Although domestic travel declined, we're seeing demand for travel from affluent customers increase. However, they are prioritizing international travel, and we expect outbound travel from China to remain at elevated levels in the near term. Asia Pacific, excluding Greater China, once again produced remarkable results, with RevPAR up approximately 18% due to strong international inbound travel with notable demand coming from Greater China and the United States. RevPAR in Japan increased 35% and RevPAR in South Korea increased 20%. In Europe, RevPAR increased approximately 11% driven by outbound travel from the United States with notable strength in Germany and Spain. Our European all-inclusive properties produced impressive net package RevPAR growth of approximately 12%, driven by high demand for our resorts in the Balearic and Canary Islands. We reported record gross fees in the quarter of $275 million, up 12% due to a combination of our RevPAR growth, greater system size and an increase in our non-RevPAR fees. Franchise and other fees increased 32% due to the growth of our franchise footprint, growth in our co-branded credit card fees and the contribution from UVCCs. Base fees increased 4% and reflecting the combination of increased managed RevPAR and fees from newly opened managed hotels, offset by hotels in Greater China. Incentive fees decreased approximately 7% due to lower contribution from hotels in Greater China, hotels under renovation and in Maui. Turning to our segment results. Management and franchising segment adjusted EBITDA increased approximately 11%, driven by the increase in our gross fees. Owned and leased segment adjusted EBITDA increased by 9% when adjusted for the net impact of transactions. Business transient revenue for the portfolio increased by double digits during quarter and the contribution from group and related food and beverage revenue was strong. In the quarter, margins for comparable hotels increased 110 basis points. We expect that we'll achieve flat to moderate expansion of owned and leased margins for the full year compared to 2023. And finally, our Distribution segment adjusted EBITDA increased $9 million compared to the second quarter of 2023. Excluding UVC, adjusted EBITDA declined by approximately $5 million, consistent with the expectations we communicated during our first quarter earnings call. We expect third quarter adjusted EBITDA for ALG Vacations to decline approximately $5 million to last year due to a combination of cancellations related Hurricane Barrel and weaker bookings over the last few weeks due to the temporary system disruptions impact on airline bookings. However, we anticipate fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA for ALG Vacations to grow by approximately $10 million compared to last year because of improved airlift. I'd like to now provide an update on our strong cash and liquidity position. As of June 30, 2024, our total liquidity of approximately $3.5 billion included $2 billion of cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments and approximately $1.5 billion in borrowing capacity on our revolving credit facility. At the end of the quarter, total debt outstanding was approximately $3.9 billion. The increased levels of debt and short-term investments this quarter results from the notes we issued in June. We invested the proceeds from these notes in marketable securities and are planning to fully repay our notes maturing on October 1, 2024, at or prior to maturity. In the second quarter, we repurchased $134 million of Class A common shares and we have approximately $1.6 billion remaining under our share repurchase authorization. We remain committed to our investment-grade profile and our balance sheet is strong. Before I turn to our 2024 outlook, I'd like to note a change that we made to our financial reporting. We've added a new financial line item to the income statement called transaction and integration costs, which includes integration costs for recently acquired businesses and transaction costs for certain pending and completed transactions. We now exclude transactions and integration costs from adjusted EBITDA. As we believe this better represents our core operations and provides information consistent with how our management evaluates operating performance. Now I will cover our outlook for 2024. The full details can be found on page 3 of our earnings release. We expect full year system-wide RevPAR growth between 3% and 4% compared to 2023 and we expect group and business transient revenue growth to outpace leisure transient for the second half of the year. We anticipate United States RevPAR growth for the full year of approximately 2% compared to 2023, led by group and business travel in the third quarter. Our outlook assumes RevPAR growth in Greater China is negative for the last two quarters of this year compared to last year as domestic travel laps tougher comparisons to 2023 and outbound international travel increases. Finally, we expect RevPAR growth in other international markets to exceed the high end of our range, led by Europe and Asia Pacific, excluding Greater China. We expect net rooms growth between 5.5% and 6%, driven by organic growth, conversions and potential portfolio transactions that may close by year end. Gross fees are expected to be in the range of $1.085 billion to $1.115 billion, a 13% increase at the midpoint of our range compared to last year. Our revised outlook accounts for lower incentive fee contribution in the second quarter from hotels in Greater China, weaker-than-expected demand in Maui and hotels under renovation. Our outlook also assumes lower fee contribution from hotels in Greater China during the second half of 2024 and a lower fee contribution from hotels in the United States during the fourth quarter. Adjusted G&A is expected to be in the range of $425 million to $435 million. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $1.135 billion to $1.175 billion, a 10% increase at the midpoint of our range compared to last year. Our outlook accounts for the removal of about $10 million of integration costs related to the change to adjusted EBITDA I just mentioned and reflects the reduction that we have made to our RevPAR range and growth fees. Free cash flow is expected to range from $560 million to $610 million. And finally, we expect capital returns to shareholders in the range of $800 million to $850 million including share repurchases and dividends. In closing, our second quarter results highlight the strength of our asset-light business model and our mix of asset-light earnings will increase further as we complete our asset disposition program and realize our net rooms growth expectations. We remain committed to our capital allocation strategy, which has delivered and will continue to deliver exceptional shareholder value by investing in growth, maintaining an investment-grade profile and returning capital to shareholders. This concludes our prepared remarks, and we're now happy to answer your questions.