Thanks, Bryan. As mentioned earlier, premium grew 21% in the second quarter. We continue to see growth in most of our divisions. We're seeing particularly strong growth in our small property, entertainment, and general casualty divisions, as well as in some of our newer divisions, like high value homeowners and commercial auto. Our excess casualty business is also growing nicely. Our professional line segment is seeing the most competition. Given that this is a highly profitable segment for us with plenty of margin, we are getting selectively more aggressive in this space. Submission growth continues to be strong in the low 20s for the quarter, basically unchanged from the first quarter. This number is subject to some variability, but in general, we've used submissions as a leading indicator of growth, and so we see the submission growth rate as a positive signal. Turning to rates, we see rates being up around 6% on a nominal basis down modestly from around 7% last quarter. It is important to keep in mind, the market isn't a monolith. In some areas, our rates are going up higher than 6%, and in some areas, they're going up less. In some targeted areas, we may cut rates, areas like professional lines because the margins are so high that we feel the trade-off between rate and growth is worthwhile. But overall, that 6% still puts us ahead of trend, and we feel that the business we are putting on the books is the best price business in our history. It is worth reiterating that when considering our rates and our growth, what we are tempted to do is to achieve an optimal trade-off between premium growth and ROE with the ultimate aim of maximizing wealth-building for investors, which we feel we do by growing earnings per share and book value. In some instances, we will accept a lower ROE for higher growth, and in other instances, we will trade lower growth for higher margin. This process is going on all the time at the division level with one caveat. There is a minimum ROE we'd be willing to accept. To be a compounder of wealth, we need to be well above the mid-teens ROE threshold we've discussed over the years. Turning to inflation, we continue to be cautious around loss cost trends. Headline CPI is remaining stubbornly above the Fed's target. This affects our longer-tailed lines more, and so we tend to be cautious and conservative when it comes to setting prices and booking reserves. We've seen other companies experiencing this adverse development, particularly in some of those longer-tailed lines, and we don't want to experience the same thing. We think it's important that our shareholders have confidence in our reserves, and so we set our reserves such that we feel they are more likely to develop favorably than adversely over time. Overall, we remain optimistic. Our results are good, our prospects are good, and as the low-cost provider in our space, we have a durable competitive advantage that shall allow us to continue to gradually take market share from our higher-expense competitors while continuing to deliver strong returns and build wealth for investors. With that, I'll turn it back over to Mike.