Thank you, Michael. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'm pleased to report that we delivered another quarter of strong underlying operating results. This was led by our Specialty Auto business, which once again produced a solid underlying combined ratio and meaningful year-over-year PIF growth. Before we dig into the specifics of our results, I'd like to provide some context around the overall auto market competitiveness and more specifically, the specialty auto segment. I believe we're all aware that there's been a hard market for auto in general, over the first half of this year, there's been clear evidence that markets are softening and reverting to more normalized conditions. As most carriers see combined ratios recovering to more acceptable profitability levels, they're not taking major rate increases. In some cases, they're decreasing rates and increasing underwriting appetite to more aggressively compete for new business. The result is a combination of reduced consumer shopping and more available options when they do shop. Accordingly, the high levels of growth seen by the strongest players are naturally normalizing to more traditional levels. Most of us in the industry think and talk about hard, normal and soft market conditions. These descriptions work overall for commercial lines as well as the standard and preferred personal auto market, but they don't really work for the specialty auto segment. As I stated in the past, within specialty auto, you generally see either a hard market or a more normalized market. Overall, we don't typically experience a traditional soft market because of our segment's unique characteristics. First, there are many smaller competitors who only operate in a few local geographies. Second, the speed of loss development is typically faster than the standard market. And third, customer policy lifetime tenures are much shorter than the standard market. The combination of these characteristics has several implications. You can't recover short-term irrational pricing over the lifetime of a customer. Aggressive pricing is seen in results more rapidly and no single competitor can typically soften the overall market with irrationally aggressive activity. In specialty auto, we may experience short-term softness in select geographies, but in general, it does not last long or impact the overall market. Recall our competitive advantages. We deliver a low-cost value proposition tailored to our unique customer needs. We bring a distinct scale advantage and a deep understanding of our market. This enables us to deliver leading differentiated product sophistication, claims effectiveness and ease of use. We are confident that our competitive advantages will continue to produce attractive long-term profitable growth in a more normal market environment. With this as a backdrop, let's move to Page 4 and jump into this quarter's financial results. We delivered a return on adjusted equity of 15%, adjusted book value per share growth of 14% year-over-year and an all-time high trailing 12-month operating cash flow of nearly $600 million. Our core businesses continue to perform very well. Specialty Auto generated a 93.5% underlying combined ratio, while producing 8% year-over-year PIF growth and earned premium growth of 17%. Our Private Passenger Auto business produced an underlying combined ratio and year-over-year growth better than long-term norms but was somewhat off the hard market highs. Our Commercial Auto business continued to perform well, and produced an underlying combined ratio of 90%, while growing PIF by 18%. Here, we reported adverse prior-year development of approximately $19 million, which was driven by the general effect of social inflation. When viewed over a rolling 4 or 8 quarter basis, this business consistently produces attractive combined ratios and growth, and is a source of continued reliable strength. The performance of our alternative investments negatively impacted both our Specialty Auto and Life segments. This quarter, we had some modest noise, which I generally categorize as consistent with the broad marketplace investments volatility. We continue to maintain a high-quality investment portfolio, and Brad will get into the specifics around this shortly. The business fundamentals underlying our Life segment remain stable. The business continued to produce a strong return on capital and distributable cash flows. Lastly, we continue to execute on our multi-quarter balance sheet strengthening. Last quarter, we retired $450 million of debt, bringing our debt-to-cap ratio near our long-term target and our cash flow from operations hit an all-time high. With a strong balance sheet and healthy liquidity, we've repurchased $80 million of common stock since April 1. Given our expectations around future growth and strong operating metrics, the Board approved an additional $500 million of repurchase authorization, bringing the total available to $550 million. Brad will discuss our financials and share repurchases in more detail. Overall, we're pleased with our second quarter results. With that, I'll turn the call over to Brad.