Thank you, and good morning, everyone. The second quarter of 2023 is the third quarter under our new reporting structure with the three business segments of HDMC, HDFS and LiveWire. In Q2, we experienced the impact of an unplanned production suspension at our U.S. manufacturing operations, where global wholesale shipments decreased by 10% year-over-year. Yet global pricing was able to partially offset unit declines, allowing us to turn in a strong margin performance as unit mix and productivity are key areas of focus. In addition, we continue to invest into building core competencies in our Hardwire pillars. Turning to our financial results in the second quarter. Total consolidated HDI revenue of $1.4 billion was down 2% compared to last year. The components of this were, at HDMC, revenue declined by 4%; at Harley-Davidson Financial Services, revenue grew by 19%; and at LiveWire, revenue declined by 44%. Total consolidated HDI operating income was $221 million, which was $56 million lower than the prior year. The components of this were, at HDMC, operating income of $194 million was 8% lower than the prior year; at Harley-Davidson Financial Services, operating income of $59 million declined by 31% on a year-over-year basis; and at LiveWire, an operating loss of $32 million was in line with our expectations. Second quarter earnings per share of $1.22 compares to $1.46 last year as a result of the factors noted above. As we flip the page to first half results, total consolidated HDI revenue of $3.2 billion was up 9% compared to last year. The components of this were, at HDMC, revenue increased by 8%; at Harley-Davidson Financial Services, revenue grew by 17%; and at LiveWire, revenue declined by 35%. Total consolidated HDI operating income was $591 million, which was $24 million higher than the prior year. The components of this were, at HDMC, operating income of $530 million was 23% higher than prior year, reflecting a strong operating margin of 19.2% in the first half of the year; at Harley-Davidson Financial Services, operating income of $117 million declined by 32% in the first half of the year; and at LiveWire, an operating loss of $57 million was in line with our expectations. Year-to-date earnings per share of $3.27 compares to $2.91 last year, or up 12% versus the first half of 2022 as a result of the factors noted above, as well as consistent share buybacks throughout the first half of 2023. As Jochen mentioned earlier, global retail sales of new motorcycles were up 3% versus the prior year. In North America, Q2 retail sales grew by 1%, driven by strength in core categories, such as Touring and Cruiser motorcycles, which were up 7% in Q2. This was offset by declines in the sport motorcycle category following the discontinuation of our legacy Sportster models at the end of 2022, resulting in less units in the market than the year before. In Asia Pacific, Q2 retail sales grew by 24% as we continued to experience strong demand across a variety of markets. In EMEA, Q2 retail sales declined by 6%, driven by the planned unit mix shift towards profitable core product segments. Core categories were up 7% in the EMEA region in Q2 and overall profitability continued to improve. In Latin America, Q2 retail sales grew by 4%, driven by growth in Brazil that was partially offset by weakness in Mexico. Higher production in the second half of 2022 and in the first half of 2023 has allowed us to improve product availability at our dealer network over the last 12 months. On a year-over-year basis, average inventory in Q2 was up by more than 90% to healthier levels compared to the exceptionally tight level of 2022. Dealer inventory continues to be materially down versus 2019. From a retail pricing standpoint, U.S. new motorcycle transaction prices finished within our desirability threshold of plus or minus 2 percentage points of MSRP. At the HDMC segment, revenue declined by 4%, primarily due to the production suspension at our U.S. manufacturing operations that occurred primarily in Q2. Looking at the HDMC revenue bridge and focusing on the key drivers for the quarter, 10 points of decline came from decreased volume at HDMC. This was driven by the 10% decrease in wholesale motorcycle unit shipments mentioned previously. 4 points of growth came from pricing through both global MSRP increases and pricing across the Parts & Accessories and Apparel businesses. Mix contributed 2 points of growth as we continue to prioritize our most profitable models and markets. And finally, 1 point of negative impact came from foreign exchange. At HDMC, operating income of $194 million in Q2 was 8% lower than prior year, driven by lower wholesale shipments and higher operating expenses. As a reminder, our commentary is now based on the updated definition of HDMC, which excludes LiveWire. Let’s look more closely at HDMC margins. HDMC gross margin in Q2 was 34.8%, which compares to 30.9% in the prior year. The improvement of 4 points or 400 basis points was driven by pricing, cost productivity and unit mix, more than offsetting the negative impacts from reduced volume and foreign exchange. We experienced more modest cost inflation, which was approximately 1% in Q2. On a year-over-year basis, the deceleration continued to be largely driven by logistics, including lower expedited shipping expenses and ocean freight rates. Raw materials and metal markets have also continued to moderate. HDMC operating margin came in at 16.2% in Q2 from 16.8% in the prior year. The decrease was due to higher operating expense, including higher people costs and marketing spend as planned. For the first half of the year at HDMC, operating income of $530 million is a 23% increase compared to prior year. HDMC operating margin of 19.2% through the first half is 2.4 points higher than prior year. The increase is due to pricing, productivity and favorable mix more than offsetting FX and higher operating expenses. At Harley-Davidson Financial Services, revenue increased by 19%, driven by higher finance receivables, higher interest income and increased investment income. HDFS operating income in Q2 was $59 million, down 31% compared to last year. The Q2 decline was driven by higher borrowing costs as well as higher provision for credit losses due to an increase in credit reserves and realized credit losses. In Q2, HDFS’ annualized retail credit loss ratio came in at 2.6%, which is down from 3.2% in Q1 of this year. During the quarter, losses followed the typical seasonality curve, with performance in line with expectations. These levels compare to an annualized loss of 1.9% in fiscal 2022. The increase in credit losses was driven by several factors relating to the current macroeconomic environment. In addition, the allowance for credit losses for the second quarter increased to 5.3%, up from 5.1% in Q1, which is the level it had been during fiscal 2022. Total retail loan originations in Q2 were down 14%, while commercial lending receivables were up 54% to $936 million behind stronger product availability compared to prior year. Total quarter-end net financing receivables, including both retail loans and commercial lending receivables, was $7.5 billion, which was up 6% versus prior year. Total interest expense in Q2 was up $38 million or up 80% versus prior year. The increase was driven by a higher cost of funding, as lower interest rate debt matured and was replaced with current market-rate debt. During the first half of 2023, we raised approximately $2 billion in the capital markets. And at the end of Q2, cash and committed bank and conduit facilities resulted in an HDFS liquidity position of $2.4 billion. We believe this has put HDFS in a very strong position from both a funding and liquidity perspective. For the LiveWire segment, second quarter revenue decreased from $13 million to $7 million due to lower unit sales of both electric motorcycles and the electric balance bikes. LiveWire operating loss of $32 million was, as Karim highlighted, in line with expectations and was driven by product development spending associated with the launch of the Del Mar electric motorcycle. Wrapping up with Harley-Davidson, Inc financial results. In the first half of 2023, we delivered $411 million of operating cash flow, which was up from $244 million in the prior year. The increase in operating cash flow was due primarily to less new working capital needs in the first half of 2023 versus the first half of 2022. Total cash and cash equivalents ended at $1.5 billion, which was $672 million lower than at the end of Q2 prior year. This consolidated cash number includes $216 million from LiveWire. Additionally, during the first half of 2023, as part of our capital allocation strategy, we bought back 4.1 million shares of our stock at a value of $156 million. As we look to the rest of 2023 based on our results to date and our business outlook, we are revising our HDMC guidance and the LiveWire segment unit sales guidance, while we are reaffirming our HDFS, LiveWire operating income and HDI CapEx guidance. At HDMC, we now expect HDMC revenue growth of flat to plus 3%. This revised forecast is in line with our overall strategy and addresses the impacts caused by the production suspension at our U.S. manufacturing operations. HDMC operating income margin of 13.9% to 14.3%. We continue to believe the anticipated positive impact from pricing and our cost productivity efforts within the supply chain will offset expected cost inflation and currency headwinds. At LiveWire, we now expect unit sales of 600 to 1,000. This reflects the updated Del Mar motorcycle go-to-market timing. At LiveWire, we continue to expect an operating loss range of $115 million to $125 million. As we look to the rest of 2023, we are reaffirming our full year guidance for HDFS and HDI CapEx guidance. At HDFS, we continue to expect HDFS operating income to decline by 20% to 25%. In Q2, we experienced lower realized credit losses than in Q1, as seasonality played out as we had expected. We continue to stay focused on several actions underway to effectively manage the business in today’s credit environment, including increased investments behind collections and stronger repossession efforts. And we continue to build other revenue sources, including licensing revenue and insurance revenue, which was up more than 30% in the first half of 2023. And lastly, for total HDI, we continue to expect capital investments of $225 million to $250 million as we continue to invest behind product development and capability enhancements. Through the first half of the year, we have seen cost inflation generally in line with our expectations and continue to expect in aggregate about 2 points of inflation for the full year 2023 compared to 4% in 2022. Labor and warehousing costs continue to be the primary drivers of inflation, with deflation and moderation expected within logistics, freight and raw materials. We now expect $100 million in cost productivity in 2023, taking into account the adjustments in volume and updated production environment. For HDFS, we expect the operating income declines to moderate in the second half of the year as we begin to lap the interest rate increases that took effect in 2022. As we look at capital allocation for the remainder of 2023, our priorities remain to fund growth of the Hardwire initiatives, which includes the capital expenditures mentioned previously; paying dividends; and executing discretionary share repurchases. In summary, we are pleased with the resiliency of our financial results through the first half of the year, especially our margin performance, despite a complex retail environment. And with that, I’ll turn it back to the operator to take your questions.