Thank you, Jochen, and good morning to all. While Jochen touched on many of the benefits of our new strategic partnerships with KKR and PIMCO, I wanted to provide a transaction overview before I go into the Q2 results at Harley-Davidson. Harley-Davidson has agreed to sell a common equity interest in HDFS at approximately 1.75x book value, with each partner acquiring a 4.9% stake. As part of this transaction, HDFS has agreed to sell over $5 billion of existing gross consumer retail loan receivables and residual interest in securitized consumer loan receivables at a premium to par value. As a result, we will have a benefit from the release of loan loss reserve and sale of consumer loan receivables at a premium to par value. We expect this to contribute $275 million to $300 million incremental to HDFS operating income in fiscal year 2025. This will allow us to execute on our expectations to reduce approximately $4 billion of HDFS debt associated with consumer retail loan receivables. In addition, going forward, on an annual basis, we expect the strategic partners to purchase around 2/3 of HDFS future retail loan originations annually for 5 years, also at a premium to par value. The partners will pay a fixed servicing fee of 1% and 2.5% for prime and subprime receivables purchased from HDFS, respectively. Of note, in this transaction, we are not selling any wholesale receivables. There is no direct impact on commercial lending, card products, insurance and protection products or international beyond the equity stake mentioned. And Harley-Davidson retains a controlling interest in HDFS with over 90% ownership. The transaction is expected to close in the second half of this year. In summary, we are excited to unlock significant value of HDFS for our shareholders through the sale of a minority stake, while transforming HDFS into a capital-light financing business. In addition, following 2026, it is creating a path that we believe will grow HDFS operating income in the future through new loan origination fees and loan servicing fees. Naturally, we welcome that with the transaction we will generate $1.25 billion of discretionary cash for Harley-Davidson to use while we retain full control and majority ownership of HDFS. Now I will turn to the Q2 results at Harley-Davidson. I plan to start on Page 7 of the presentation where I will briefly summarize the consolidated financial results for the second quarter of 2025. And subsequently, I will go into further detail on each business segment. Consolidated revenue in the second quarter was down 19%, largely in line with our expectations across HDMC and HDFS, while revenue also decreased at LiveWire. Consolidated operating income in the second quarter was $112 million, driven by a decline of 69% at HDMC. Operating income at HDFS came in at down 2% relative to prior year. At the LiveWire segment, the operating loss came in at $19 million. Consolidated operating income margin in the second quarter came in at 8.6% relative to 14.9% in the second quarter a year ago, representing a 629 basis point decline primarily due to the impacts associated with lower volume as we deliver on our commitment to help bring down dealer inventories. I plan to go into further detail on each business segment's profit-and-loss drivers in the next section. Second quarter earnings per share was $0.88. As said previously, in Q2, global retail was down 15%, with the North American market being down 17% and international markets down 12%. Broadly speaking, customers are continuing to seemingly take a pause or a wait-and-see approach to some extent based on higher interest rates and overall macro uncertainty, both factors having a meaningful impact on our specific customer profile buying patterns. In North America, the market continued to experience lower customer traffic coming into Harley-Davidson dealerships. We also experienced this in the first quarter, even though traffic trends improved in Q2. Our conversion rates actually remain fairly solid relative to recent history. Starting in April as greater global tariff uncertainty was introduced, it added to the overall economic uncertainty that we experienced in Q1 and it stayed with us through most of Q2. North America performance for Q2 saw a year-over-year decline, but was an improvement from the decline experienced in Q1. As we get through July, we are seeing some signs of improvement in customer traffic in dealerships in North America based on some of our most recent go-to-market initiatives such as new marketing initiatives, targeted promotional activity, a renewed approach to strategic price changes in each family, and amplified and more creative rider testing initiatives. We are also seeing our new marketing development fund truly being embraced by our North American dealers with impacts now showing up in market. In EMEA, retail is down 5% and experienced overall volatility due to the global tariff situation. Softail motorcycle retail was positive in Q2, up 4% as the redesigned model year '25 Softails hit the market. From a country perspective, we witnessed growth in the German region and the Benelux and Nordic region. These were offset by declines in France and the U.K. In Asia Pacific, retail continued to be soft and was down 21%. This was due to intense competition in the lightweight and smaller motorcycle segments. From a products perspective, our refreshed Softail model year '25 lineup performed fine as it hit the market in Q2, but we are optimistic for a stronger performance in the second half of the year. From a country perspective, the sharpest declines were in Japan and in China due to continued economic uncertainty. In Q2, in the Total Cruiser category, we experienced plus 6% volume growth in the U.S. and gained 3 points of share in the Total Cruiser segment, growing to 53% market share in Q2 of '25 from 50% market share in Q2 of '24. Moving on to dealer inventory. We believe current dealer inventory and product availability are in an improving and healthier position overall as we are now in the midst of the 2025 riding season. Global dealer motorcycle inventories were down 28% at the end of Q2 compared to the end of Q2 of '24. We are committed to supporting a significant year-over-year dealer inventory reduction by year- end. We are well on our way to this as already demonstrated in the first quarter and again in the second quarter, which marks our third consecutive quarter of decreasing dealer inventory on an equivalent year-over-year basis. Looking at revenue, HDMC revenue decreased by 23% in Q2. Focusing on the key drivers for the quarter. 23 points of decline came from decreased wholesale volume at HDMC where motorcycle shipments in the quarter were down 28%, coming in at 36,000 units, compared to 50,000 units in the year-ago period. This level balances our need to be prepared for the ongoing riding season and balance against any changes in the demand environment given the recent macro headlines and uncertainty. 1 point of growth came from favorable year-over-year pricing net of sales incentives for 2025 model year product. 1 point of decline came from mix as we balanced out the delivery of motorcycle models and markets. And finally, foreign exchange impacts resulted in 1 point of growth to Q2 revenue relative to prior year. In Q2, HDMC gross margin was 28.6%, which compares to 32.1% in the prior year. The decrease of 350 basis points was driven by the revenue factors I just spoke about, and lower operating leverage, which includes modest cost inflation of less than 1%. In order to deliver on our commitment to help bring down dealer inventory, production volumes were down commensurate with the lower wholesale shipments in Q2 of 2025. The lower production volumes resulted in a higher fixed cost per unit on motorcycle shipped in Q2 of 2025. The unfavorable impact of lower operating leverage was modestly offset by other productivity savings related primarily to supply management during the quarter. In addition, the cost of new or increased tariffs implemented in 2025 resulted in $13 million of incremental cost in the Q2 period, creating a headwind of 125 basis points to the Q2 2025 operating income margin. Operating expenses in Q2 came in $2 million higher than prior year at $237 million, which resulted in an HDMC operating margin of 5.9%, which compares to 14.7% in the prior year period. This higher OpEx was primarily driven by the planned spend for the marketing development fund that I spoke of earlier, and was partially offset by lower people costs which we achieved through robust cost discipline. Turning to Slide 12. In the year-to-date period, HDMC gross margin was 28.9%, which compares to 31.7% in the prior year. The decrease of 280 basis points was driven by lower volumes and lower operating leverage, partially offset by the positive impacts of pricing, mix and foreign currency. The year-to-date results include modest cost inflation of less than 1%. In addition, the cost of new or increased tariffs implemented in 2025 resulted in $17 million of incremental costs in the year-to-date period, creating a headwind of 80 basis points to the year-to-date operating income margin. This excludes costs of $7 million to mitigate tariff impacts. Operating expenses in the year-to-date period came in $21 million lower than prior year at $436 million, which resulted in an HDMC operating margin of 8.4%, which compares to 15.4% in the prior year period. Before we turn to the next slide, I would like to update on our ongoing productivity cost program where we were expecting to drive a $400 million improvement in productivity by 2025. As a reminder, for the cumulative 3-year period of 2022 through 2024, we have achieved unlevered productivity savings of $257 million. We continue to expect to achieve another $100 million for all of 2025 and again in 2026, exceeding our Hardwire dollar target by over 10%, as mentioned in February. In the first half of 2025, we achieved $48 million of unlevered productivity, split evenly by quarter, primarily from logistics and supply chain initiatives. Turning to Slide 13. The global tariff environment remains uncertain, but we wanted to provide an update. In the first half of 2025, the cost of new or increased tariffs was $17 million. This includes direct tariff exposure, Harley-Davidson importing and exporting product as well as indirect tariff exposure from our suppliers. This excludes pricing mitigation actions as well as any expenses to accelerate product deliveries ahead of tariffs. We do expect that the direct tariff costs will increase in the second half of the year, but the environment remains volatile. Harley-Davidson is a business very centered in and around the U.S. Three of four manufacturing plants are U.S.-based, including final assembly in York, Pennsylvania, and powertrain operations and injection-molding with class-leading paint application each in Wisconsin. We also have a U.S.-centric approach to sourcing with approximately 75% of component purchasing coming from the U.S. And all of our core products sold in the U.S. are proudly assembled in the U.S. With that in mind, we estimate our full year 2025 impact from the direct costs of new or increased tariffs to be in the range of $50 million to $85 million. This has been reduced from $130 million to $175 million at Q1 release on May 1. We have a number of actions underway to mitigate the impact and we expect this situation will remain fluid given the uncertainty that still exists. Turning back to HDFS and its performance. At Harley-Davidson Financial Services, Q2 revenue came in at $257 million, a decrease of only 2%, driven by modestly lower retail receivables and commercial receivables. HDFS operating income was $70 million, down less than $2 million or 2% compared to last year. The small Q2 decrease was driven by lower net interest income and higher operating expenses, partially offset by lower provision for credit losses and higher other income. The provision for credit loss expense was $6 million lower as a result of a favorable reserve change, partially offset by higher credit losses. Our reserve change was $7 million favorable as compared to Q2 2024, primarily driven by a smaller increase in retail receivables during Q2 '25 compared to Q2 of 2024. In Q2, HDFS's annualized retail credit loss ratio was 3.25%, which compares to 3.12% in the year-ago period. Retail credit losses were $1 million higher than a year ago. In addition to the small increase in credit losses, the June 2025 annualized retail credit loss ratio was further negatively impacted by a decline in retail receivables. While delinquencies remained elevated as customers continue to be impacted by higher bike payments and general inflationary pressures, the retail credit losses moderated, thanks to improved repossession success rates and stabilizing recovery values at auction. There were no commercial finance credit losses during Q2 2025. In addition, the retail allowance for credit losses for the second quarter remained flat at 5.7% from Q1 of 2025. Total retail loan originations in Q2 were down 15%, while commercial financing activities were also down, decreasing 20% to $1.1 billion as a result of the significant reduction in motorcycle inventories at our Harley-Davidson dealerships. Total quarter-end net financing receivables, including both retail loans and commercial financing, was $7.3 billion, which was down 9% versus prior year. For the LiveWire segment, which is on Page 17, electric motorcycles revenue decreased in the second quarter of 2025 compared to the prior year period, driven by lower unit sales of LiveWire electric motorcycles. Selling, administrative and engineering expenses were $8 million lower compared to the prior year. LiveWire operating loss of $19 million in Q2 of 2025 was in line with expectations and compares to an operating loss of $28 million in the prior Q2. We now expect LiveWire's full year operating loss to come in between $59 million and $69 million. On a unit basis, LiveWire reported sales of 55 units in Q2, compared to 158 units sold in the prior Q2. The uncertain macroenvironment and the lack of any incentive continued to weigh on the consumers' discretionary appetite for bigger motorcycles in early-stage EV products. Wrapping up with consolidated Harley-Davidson Q2 financial results, we delivered $509 million of operating cash flow, which was down $68 million from the prior period. The decrease in operating cash flow was due to lower net income and due to working capital activity, partially offset by lower net cash outflows related to wholesale finance receivables in the first 6 months of 2025 as compared to the same period last year. Total cash and cash equivalents ended at $1.6 billion, which was $261 million lower than at the end of Q2 prior year. This consolidated cash number includes $29 million at LiveWire. Additionally, as part of our capital allocation strategy, we remain committed to returning capital to shareholders. Given the unexpected operating environment since early April due to the sudden and unpredictable changes in global tariff policy, we moved to the sidelines in Q2 and did not buy back any Harley-Davidson shares during Q2. We did buy back 3.4 million shares of our stock at a value of $87 million in Q1 of 2025. Given that the global tariff situation remains ongoing and uncertain, we continue to withhold our full year 2025 financial outlook for HDMC and HDI. Following today's announcement, we expect HDFS should come in at approximately $525 million to $550 million of operating income for 2025. As we move into the second half of 2025 and with the noted closing of the HDFS transaction, I will again summarize the intended uses of proceeds. We plan to increase the pace of buybacks and are working hard to deliver on our $1 billion commitment in share repurchases we announced in July of 2024. Our plan is to purchase $500 million of shares during the second half of the year, as mentioned earlier. We also plan to reduce our debt by $450 million and have a meaningful balance remaining to invest into the business. We expect this will give us the flexibility to invest up to $300 million of additional funds into future growth opportunities. And with that, we will open it up to Q&A.