Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. Before we start note that our reported results for this quarter included $13 million of sales deferrals, which reduced reported GAAP revenues and were related decreased sales of our newest phases of our Maui Bay Villas and Ocean Tower projects. We also recorded $5 million of associated direct expense deferrals. Adjusting for those two items would increase EBITDA reported in our press release by $8 million to $217 million. In my prepared remarks, I only refer to metrics excluding net deferrals, which more accurately reflects cash flow dynamics of our financial performance during the period. I'd also note that our results today also include a full quarter of financial results for Bluegreen, which we closed on January 17. Turning to our results for the quarter, total revenue, excluding cost reimbursements in the quarter was $1.1 billion and adjusted EBITDA was $270 million, with margins of 24% excluding reimbursements. EBITDA included $14 million of Bluegreen cost synergies recognized during the quarter for a run rate of $71 million annualized on target with our plan for $100 million of cost synergies within 24 months. Turning to our segments, within real estate, contract sales were $757 million for the quarter with Bluegreen contributing $189 million of sales in the quarter. New buyer comprised 31% of contract sales in the quarter, improving over 300 basis points from the first quarter level. Tours for the quarter were over 226,000, which was slightly below the prior year's pro forma level and Bluegreen contributed just under 66,000 tours for the quarter. Our owner tours and low single-digit growth in the quarter and remain at levels over 15% ahead of 2019, demonstrating the continued resilience of our owner channels that want to explore our expanded resort network and benefits of HGV Max. However, as Mark mentioned, the new buyer tours remain pressured as we're continuing to work to rebuild our new buyer tour pipelines, along with making operational adjustments to improve local marketing. VPG for the quarter was $3,320 was just over 10% ahead of 2019 levels. Our own our new buyer VPGs declined by a similar amount, and both core HCV and Bluegreen saw a slight deterioration in year-over-year growth rates from Q1 or into slightly lower close rates from the macro and execution factors that Mark mentioned earlier. Cost of product was 14% net VOI sales for the quarter and our provision for bad debt as a percentage of owned contract sales was just over 15% in the quarter. Real estate sales and marketing expense was $375 million for the quarter or 49% and contract sales. Real estate profit for the quarter was $128 million with margins of 22%. And our financing business, second quarter revenue was $102 million and segment profit was $58 million with margins of 57%. Interest income and segment profit for the quarter were impacted by $28 million in contra revenue for the amortization of the non-cash premium associated with the portfolio of receivables that we acquired from Bluegreen and the acquisition coupled with the non-cash premium still being amortized for the Diamond transaction. These items will continue to decline over time as our acquired portfolio pays down. So to more clearly distinguish them from our core underwriting business, we've updated the tables for our financing business in our press release. Excluding the temporary impact of these adjustments, the core underwriting business had interest income of $116 million and margins of 68%. Going forward, we expect the non-cash premium amortization of these portfolios to continue to create some noise in reported financials. For the core business remained steady with the originated weighted average interest rate of 15.21%, up slightly from the first quarter. Additionally, the recent easing of benchmark rates should help reduce some of the interest cost pressure on the new ABS issuances. Combined gross receivables for the quarter were $3.85 billion or $2.84 billion. Net of allowance. Our total allowance for bad debt was $1 billion on that $3.85 billion receivable balance for 26.2% of the portfolio. Our annualized default rate for our consolidated portfolio, inclusive of Bluegreen, stood at 9.68% for the quarter, our provision was 15.4% as a percent of contract sales in the quarter as is consistent with the expectations of steady-state provision level in the range of mid-10s. Currently, we expect the provision for the year to remain in the mid-10s with sequential uptick in the third quarter, followed by sequentially lower provision in the fourth quarter due to seasonal trends. It is important to note that this assume similar levels of new buyer and owner mix. Recall that new buyers carry a higher provision levels than owners which can impact provision levels in any given quarter. Digging deeper into the drivers of our provision. Generally, the HGV underwritten deed of trust folks are holding steady. For them to Bluegreen portfolio, we've seen higher losses from some originations that were underwritten prior to our integration and have increased our provision accordingly. While we've addressed much of this in our opening balance sheet process, we do expect some headwinds in the near term while we work to consolidating and aligning underwriting procedures, sales practices and risk-based pricing much like we did for Diamond. In our resort and club business, our consolidated member count was 720,000 and our NOG was 1.7% at the end of the second quarter. Revenue was $171 million for the quarter and segment profit was $123 million with margins of 72%. Rental and ancillary revenues were $195 million in the quarter, with segment profit of $7 million and margin to 4%. Revenue growth was driven by higher available room nights offset by slightly lower RevPAR, expenses on our low legacy business continued to be elevated due to the impact of additional inventory and developer maintenance fee expense, along with inclusion of Bluegreen's, much lower margins, rental business. Bridging the gap between segment adjusted EBITDA and total adjusted EBITDA of HGV EBITDA added $5 million, offset by G&A expenses of $44 million, license fees of $40 million, and EBITDA attributable to non-controlling interest of $4 million. Our adjusted free cash flow in the quarter was $370 million, which included inventory spending of $86 million Cash flow conversion rate exceeded 130% this quarter owing to the timing of inflows from our two recent ABS deals. And for the year, we anticipate that we will be able to maintain a conversion ratio that is roughly in line with our expectations as well as last year's conversion in the low 50% range. During the quarter, the company repurchased 2.3 million shares of common stock for $100 million. And through July 31, we repurchased an additional 1.1 million shares for $46.3 million, leaving us with 114 million of remaining availability under the 2023 repurchase plan. We also received approval from our Board of Directors authorizing us to repurchase an aggregate of $500 million, which is in addition to the remaining amount of our 2023 authorization. We remain committed to capital returns as our primary use of excess free cash flow, and we'll maintain our existing base of approximately $100 million per quarter and share repurchases. Turning to our outlook, as Mark mentioned, owing to the more challenging quarter and outlook, we are lowering our guidance for adjusted EBITDA to a range of $1.075 billion to $1.135 billion, $425 million lower than our prior guidance. Our own primarily to the pressures that we mentioned on our VPG and tour trends and to a lesser extent, the continued headwind from bad debt normalization that we had mentioned on prior calls, as of June 30, our liquidity position consisted of $328 million of unrestricted cash and $446 million of availability under our revolving credit facility. Our debt balance at quarter end was comprised of corporate debt of $4.9 billion and a non-recourse debt balance of approximately $1.7 billion. At quarter end, we had $750 million of remaining capacity in our warehouse facilities, of which we had $647 million of notes available to securitize and another $324 million of mortgage notes we anticipate being eligible following certain customary milestones such as first payment dating and recording. From a timing perspective, we anticipate coming to the market with another ABS deal this coming fall, which should provide incremental adjusted free cash flow in our second half. And as I mentioned, we still feel comfortable with our prior assumption around our adjusted EBITDA to our adjusted free cash flow conversion rate ratio. Turning to our credit metrics at the end of Q2 and inclusive of all anticipated cost synergies, the company's total net leverage on a TTM basis was 3.67 times as we continue to make progress towards our target leverage range of 2 times to 3 times while still repurchasing shares. I'm also happy to report, we successfully repriced our 2031 Term Loan B from a spread of 275 basis points to a spread of 225 basis points, generating nearly $5 million per year in cash interest savings. We will now turn the call over to our operator and look forward to your questions. Operator?