Thomas A. Bell
Thank you, Stuart, and thank you all for joining us today. I'm pleased to speak to you all against the backdrop of our truly differentiated Q2 results. We've recorded robust revenue growth, 4.8% year-to-date, record profitability, 15.2% EBITDA margin this quarter and robust operating cash flow, up 28% this quarter. These results are especially gratifying given the dynamic market environment through which we are navigating. Behind this performance is our proactive enactment of intelligent austerity measures, a team that is leaning into our unparalleled customer understanding and engaging customers as their partner to create smarter and more efficient outcomes. Our wrapping technology, AI and all our golden bolts even more aggressively around all our products and services to enhance our customers' effectiveness and completely aligning all of Leidos around our North Star 2030 strategy. It is because of this that I'm also pleased to be able to raise our full year guidance for 2025. As you will recall, our North Star 2030 strategy is comprised of 5 growth pillars: space and maritime, energy infrastructure, digital modernization and cyber, mission software and managed health services. Our determined ongoing engagement with customers continues to validate these North Star 2030 growth pillars. In fact, the significant multiyear funds provided by the One Big Beautiful Bill speak directly to our North Star 2030 growth pillars and our core Leidos capabilities. With the One Big Beautiful Bill now law and the administration's priorities now clear, our customers are moving out to execute programs for essential missions right in our wheelhouse. These include our space and maritime growth pillar, supporting a wide range of needs in the Golden Dome initiative; our mission software growth pillar, along with our global air traffic control experience being tightly aligned to the FAA's ambition for a brand-new air traffic control system; the TSA embarking on an ambitious airport screening modernization effort, which is tightly aligned to our capabilities in our airport security business; the Department of Homeland Security receiving significant additional funding, validating our ongoing investments in our ports and border security business as well as our cutting-edge counter drone capabilities and the drive for improved health outcomes and better service to our nation's veterans, speaking directly to our managed health services growth pillars. All in all, it's indeed a very exciting time for all of Leidos. Now I'd like to take a few minutes on this call to highlight the maritime component of our space and maritime growth pillar. Over the coming years, the U.S. Navy plans to rapidly deploy a larger integrated fleet of manned and unmanned vehicles, a direction that closely aligns with our strengths in maritime autonomy. This enhanced battle force will not only prepare the U.S. for future challenges, but also revitalize the U.S. shipbuilding industrial base. Leidos' full life cycle maritime capabilities are unmatched to meet this need. Leidos is the only company that possesses world-renowned naval architecture capabilities, proven experience fielding successful autonomous maritime vessels, demonstrated capabilities in state-of-the-art maritime autonomy AI and experience in designing and integrating packaged mission payloads. So Leidos is in a pole position to support the expansion of the U.S. Navy with an autonomous maritime fleet. The fiscal 2025 reconciliation bill allocated robust funding for autonomous vessels along with related autonomy and battle management software. Let me highlight a few examples of the role Leidos is already playing in this area. First, the U.S. Navy has contracted Leidos to survey commercial ships for future potential conversion to high-performance mission-ready autonomous medium unmanned surface vessels. Second, the U.S. Marines have a desire to scale up production of Leidos' low-profile small unmanned surface vessel, Sea Specter to support expeditionary warfare, particularly in the Indo-Pacific. U.S. Marines currently have 3 Sea Specters in operation and have praised its low-profile approach and capacity for missions in contested environments. And third, a classified customer has contracted with Leidos to procure one dozen Sea Darts, our low-cost attritable unmanned underwater vessel to augment their arsenals. The customer has expressed an intent to acquire an additional 70 Sea Darts next year with additional units to follow. This opportunity further positions Leidos as a leader within the subsea warfare domain critical to our nation's defense strategy. We have invested in maritime autonomy for decades. And as a result, our Leidos Autonomous Vessel Architecture, or LAVA, is the most trusted and reliable maritime autonomy on the market. LAVA has demonstrated its endurance, long-range capacity and precision while sailing more than 120,000 nautical miles. This includes our fleet of Leidos-built MUSVs that transited the Pacific from San Diego to Australia and back last year. This journey marked a huge advancement in maritime autonomy and reinforced our leadership in this crucial domain. And we are continuing to invest in technology to improve the performance and interoperability of our nation's maritime capabilities. Our team is adding our proven battle management software, AlphaMosaic, software originally developed to optimize battlefield and airspace strategies to our maritime command and control capabilities. Simultaneously, our NATO allies are increasingly acknowledging their escalating maritime threats and therefore, the imperative to modernize and prepare their maritime forces. This collective global focus presents a nearly $4 billion pipeline for Leidos over the coming years. Across all these opportunities, the new administration's playbook is clear, leveraging technology and AI to disrupt old models, drive out costs and deliver more efficient solutions. We share that passion and are thrilled to have a receptive customer eager for technology adoption. For some time, Leidos has been deploying trusted mission AI to our own business to lead our own positive disruption. We've been putting AI to work for us for years. And the results are extremely encouraging. Our AI work is on track to save more than 0.5 million labor hours by the end of this fiscal year, and we're just getting started. Let me give you a few examples of this work in action. In our growth office, we're using generative AI to help write better proposals faster. In this regard, we've already achieved some 20% greater efficiency on tasks common to every large proposal. In finance, we're using advanced automation to expedite our cash flow process and as a result, have decreased invoice build and delivery time for select customers by almost 40% while driving down error rates. And we've enabled over 1,000 software developers with AI-powered coding tools. For these coders, we've seen an over 30% reduction in the time it takes for them to deliver ready-to-test code. And using the same Leidos AI tools deployed at the FAA, we've seen a 60% increase in development productivity. This brings me to my final point today. The government is now transitioning from policy to productivity. This administration came in with a clear objective to drive efficiencies and attack the status quo. And as discussed on our last call, that's fertile ground for Leidos and core to our business model. Now I'm pleased to report that we continue to have success positioning Leidos as part of the solution, not the problem as this administration moves quickly to make government outcomes smarter and more efficient. And it's apparent to me through the myriad of cabinet level engagements I've had to date that this administration is seeking to work with agile forward-leading solution providers like Leidos. Our customer decision environment is also improving. Our 0.9 book-to-bill ratio in the second quarter was a strong snapback from Q1 and more than half of these awards were for new and takeaway business. Late in the second quarter, we were notified that we were also awarded another multibillion-dollar takeaway within the intelligence community. But as happens, that contract wasn't definitized for several weeks. Had the contract been finalized in June instead of July, our Q2 book-to-bill ratio would have been 1.3, and our backlog would have increased 4%. Looking ahead, our pipeline of opportunities remains robust, and we expect much greater awards pace in the back half of this year. It also bears mentioning today that I am encouraged by the first fruits of our Kudu acquisition. As a result of fast integration of Kudu into our business, we've already added $400 million in pipeline opportunities that neither company was pursuing separately. And we are convinced that with the combined Leidos Kudu capabilities, we've now driven up probability of winning on another $2 billion of near-term submits. Given our improving market backdrop, we're confident in our ability to deploy capital to activate our strategy and benefit our shareholders. As we execute our North Star 2030 strategy, we will continue to be on the lookout for constructive acquisitions that support our growth pillars and offer a compelling return on capital. And at the same time, our confidence in future cash flows enables us to remain multifaceted in our capital deployment philosophy. So consistent with earlier indications, we will undertake additional share repurchases and debt paydown during the back half of this year. So in summary, we are fully executing our North Star 2030 strategy. We're seen as part of the solution in the drive for smarter and more efficient government outcomes. And our customers have the funding and the conviction to move forward boldly in areas that speak to Leidos' core capabilities. With that, before we take your questions, I'll turn the call over to Chris to run through our financial details of the quarter and our improved 2025 outlook. Chris?