Thank you, Enrique, and good afternoon, everyone. We delivered another quarter of solid top-line growth driven by continued momentum in the Personal Systems commercial business, aligned with our vision of leading the future of work. We executed our strategy across multiple fronts, including growing share in high-value categories across personal, driving momentum in our key growth areas, and exercising disciplined cost management while continuing to invest in strategic initiatives. However, against the backdrop of a dynamic geopolitical landscape, our non-GAAP operating profit fell short of expectations due to additional tariff costs that could not be fully mitigated in the quarter. As a reminder, our guidance for Q2 included tariffs in place at the time. While we planned for a range of scenarios in the quarter and worked aggressively to respond to changes in the regulatory trade environment, the tariff increases announced in April were higher than expected. That said, as you heard from Enrique, we made meaningful progress expanding our supply chain and manufacturing footprint, and we accelerated actions on cost reduction and pricing. However, as we indicated last quarter, the full benefit of these mitigating actions can take a few months lead time, depending on the scope. So in the quarter, our operating margin was impacted by net tariff costs, mainly in personal systems. Taking a closer look at the details of the quarter, net revenue was up 3% nominally and 5% in constant currency, with growth across all regions. In constant currency, APJ grew 9%, Americas grew 5%, and EMEA grew 1%. And while we made progress on the cost of good reduction actions we started at the beginning of the year, gross margin at 20.7% was down year-over-year with increased tariff and commodity costs. We drove non-GAAP operating expenses down year-over-year to help offset, including driving future-ready cost savings, continuing disciplined cost management, and reducing variable compensation. All in, our operating margin of 7.3% was impacted by roughly 100 basis points due to unmitigated tariff and related impacts, mainly in personal systems. Below the op profit line, non-GAAP net OI and E was flat year-over-year, in line with our expectations, with lower short-term borrowing costs offset by currency losses. Finally, with a diluted share count of approximately 956 million shares, our non-GAAP diluted net earnings per share was $0.71, reflecting the tariff and related impacts net of mitigations of approximately $0.12. Now let's turn to segment performance. We delivered another quarter of solid growth in Personal Systems, with revenue up 7% nominally and 8% in constant currency, above our expectations and driven by higher commercial volumes and increased ASPs. We did see some demand pull forward, but estimate it was minimal, accounting for less than 1% of our revenue growth. As we signaled, we drove disciplined pricing actions to help mitigate increased tariff and component costs and shifted mix toward premium categories. And momentum continued in our key growth areas, with strong performance in AIPCs, advanced compute, and workforce solutions. We also drove commercial unit growth of 11%, gaining share overall and in premium categories. As the market momentum and refresh activity continued, commercial revenue increased 9% year-over-year with pricing actions and mix shift toward premium, offset in part by currency impacts. In Consumer, our results reflect our strategy to rebalance our portfolio to a more profitable mix. We saw 2% revenue growth on lower volume through favorable pricing and mix shift, including share gains in gaming. Our operating margin in personal systems was 4.5%, below the range we guided at the beginning of the quarter, and down year-over-year from higher commodity costs and tariff costs that were not yet fully offset by repricing and cost reductions. It's worth noting that excluding the impact of tariff costs, our PS margin would have been well within our 5% to 7% guidance range. Turning to print, our results were in line with expectations. As we continue to focus on profitable unit placement, we increased our market share in high-value categories. Our key growth areas continued to gain momentum, including revenue and subscriber growth in consumer subscriptions and industrial growth fueled by both hardware and supplies. Across print, revenue declined 3% in constant currency on supplies declines and hardware softness in North America. By customer segment, we grew consumer units 3% year-over-year, led by strong growth in big tank. In commercial, revenue declined 3% year-over-year on a 2% unit decline. We continued our purposeful focus on profitable long-term unit growth, gaining share in the higher value categories of A4 and A3. Supplies performed as expected, down 3% in constant currency, and we drove favorable pricing and market share gains that were more than offset by installed base and usage headwinds. Yet, we delivered strong print operating margins, up year-over-year and above the high end of our range, reflecting rigorous cost discipline and pricing actions, as well as the favorable impact of grant funding received in the quarter. We continue to execute our accelerated future-ready plan across process efficiency, automation, portfolio optimization, and operational excellence. And as Enrique mentioned, we now expect to achieve cumulative gross run rate savings of at least $2 billion by the end of fiscal year 2025, with no change to our estimated restructuring charges of $1.2 billion for the program. These incremental structural savings continue to be a key lever to help offset macro and geopolitical uncertainties while also continuing to fuel investment in our key growth areas and AI innovation, all designed to position us well for long-term sustainable growth. Now let me move to cash flow and capital allocation. Our cash flow from operations was roughly $38 million in the quarter, and as expected, free cash flow was slightly negative due to the timing of payments for intentional inventory as part of our overall tariff mitigation. Those payments resulted in a decrease in DPO and a corresponding increase in our cash conversion cycle in Q2, also as expected. Lastly, we returned close to $400 million to shareholders through both dividends and share repurchases. A planned debt refinancing ahead of an upcoming maturity contributed to us finishing the quarter slightly above our target leverage range. So in line with our stated policy, with a temporary increase in leverage, we limited our repurchase to offsetting stock compensation dilution. As we look ahead, we will continue to navigate a dynamic environment that may be impacted by a continuing evolution in global trade policy, broader macroeconomic trends, and the associated impact on customer demand. For that reason, we believe it is prudent to moderate our guidance for the second half of the year to reflect this. In our guide, we have accounted for the added cost driven by the current tariffs in place and associated mitigations, including leveraging our supply chain flexibility, future-ready cost reductions, and pricing actions. We were able to mitigate part of these costs in Q2, and we are confident that we will fully mitigate them by Q4. In personal systems, we now expect the PC market to grow low single digits for both the second half and full calendar year, given the uncertain macro environment. We still anticipate commercial PC catalysts, including the Win 11 refresh and AIPC adoption, to drive solid revenue growth in the back half of the year. And we expect the actions we are taking to offset the cost of tariffs to gain full traction in the second half, leading to sequential improvement in Personal Systems margins in both Q3 and Q4. In print, we continue to expect the market to decline low single digits for the calendar year, with the second half of the year declining closer to mid-single digits, in line with industry experts. We also expect our operating margin to continue to be near the top of our 16% to 19% long-term range for the year. Beyond the segments, we expect Corporate Other to be slightly higher, approaching $1.1 billion as we integrate the operations of our humane asset acquisition into our technology and innovation organization. With this all in, we now expect FY 2025 non-GAAP diluted net earnings per share to be in the range of $3.00 to $3.30 and FY 2025 GAAP diluted net earnings per share to be in the range of $2.32 to $2.62. Turning to Q3, in personal systems, we expect revenue to grow high single digits sequentially as we continue to see strength in commercial, aligned with our future of work efforts and pricing actions. And we expect personal systems margins in the lower half of the 5% to 7% range, improving sequentially as a result of the mitigation efforts we are driving. In print, we expect Q3 revenue growth to perform better than typical seasonality on incremental hardware placements and pricing actions. We expect operating margins solidly within our 16% to 19% range as we continue to focus on profitable unit placement, tariff mitigation, and disciplined cost management. With all of this, we expect third-quarter non-GAAP diluted EPS to be in the range of $0.68 to $0.80 and GAAP diluted net earnings per share to be in the range of $0.57 to $0.69. In line with our revised earnings, particularly in personal systems where we have a negative cash conversion cycle, we now expect free cash flow to be in the range of $2.6 billion to $3 billion for FY 2025. With regard to working capital, we expect our cash conversion cycle to also be impacted by the timing of purposeful actions we are taking to mitigate the fluidity of the tariff situation. It is important to note, however, that we not only expect the impact of these actions on working capital to be temporary, but as mentioned earlier, we also expect to fully mitigate the current cost of tariffs by Q4. And on our balance sheet and capital allocation, given the impact of tariffs, we expect our leverage ratio to continue to be above our target range in Q3. That said, we remain fully committed to returning approximately 100% of free cash flow to shareholders over time as long as our gross leverage ratio remains under two times and we do not see more attractive investment opportunities. In closing, we responded quickly to the changing market dynamics in the quarter to address headwinds from a rapidly changing trade environment. We remain focused on what we can control and are confident that the actions we are taking are the right ones to position us for long-term profitable growth. With that, I would like to hand it back to the operator and open the call for your questions.