Thank you, Christian, and thanks, everyone, for joining us today. We're very pleased with Murphy USA's second quarter results. We believe our flywheel is clearly in motion, delivering advantaged results to our business and creating value for our investors. Let's start today's call by taking stock of how the business as a whole is performing. Our core fuel business is delivering excellent results in a low volatility environment, which is historically when it is more difficult to grow volume. The structural dynamics that support higher breakeven economics in the industry persist, as evidenced by all-in margins of $0.317, $0.022 per gallon higher than the prior year period. As a result, second quarter retail fuel margin contribution dollars were the highest Q2 in company history, underscoring the sustainable and enduring success of Murphy USA's advantage model. Turning to merchandise performance. Same-store sales and margin growth were strong, driven by exceptional performance across tobacco categories. While total merchandise margins were up nearly 5% in the second quarter, year-to-date results are falling short of our high expectations. Given the slow start in Q1, softness in some discretionary center store categories and lighter-than-expected traffic in QuickChek markets resulting in fewer transactions that were built into our internal plan, total full year merchandise margin growth will be around 4%, as reflected in our adjusted guided range from $830 million to $840 million. Our initiatives are on track, but the early results will not overcome the impact of these drivers. Inflation is real and remains impactful to our customers. We have especially seen the effects in the Northeast markets, where we see lower inflation for food at home versus food away from home, and that remains a challenge. We also note that QSR promotional intensity has increased, where many QSRs are pivoting back to value and competing per share in prepared food and beverages, which are core traffic-driving categories at QuickChek. As a result, year-over-year sales comps remained down about 2% at QuickChek in the second quarter, with similar performance into July. This represents the largest variation to our total merchandised plan, where we anticipated more of a rebound in transactions year-over-year at QuickChek. Similar to MDR members, QC Rewards members remain very active, shopping with greater frequency and with larger baskets. But with one less trip or a trade down, it adds up. With our commitment to value pricing, the new QC Rewards rollout coming up and other initiatives, we are well positioned to get that incremental trip and trade up back. That said, there are some incredible bright spots on the merch side that highlight where we not only win in the current environment, but sustain the wins thereafter. We continue to invest and reinvest in the tobacco category from a price, promotion and capability perspective, driving strong growth across all products within the broader nicotine ecosystem. Our leadership in combustible products has built a strong foundation upon which we continue to grow share in vapor, oral nicotine and other noncombustible products that are not only growing sales and margins in the low double-digit range, but also come with higher margins. We intend to support our customers as they transition to noncombustible products, leveraging our advantaged volume position and promotional strength to continue to drive growth in the nicotine category. In the first state that has actually cracked down on illicit vapor products, we have already seen a strong resurgence in our volume to the products that the FDA has approved. Hopefully, more to come on that front. In the center store, results were mixed between nondiscretionary and discretionary products, but one thing remains clear. The Murphy USA customer spend on nondiscretionary products in our store remains very strong. Make no mistake, our customers are not immune to the inflationary pressures impacting household budgets of Americans living paycheck to paycheck, which we believe to be a growing customer segment. As such, they are making choices in their discretionary spend at our stores. Yet their spend on what we consider categories that remain core to our customers, such as fuel, tobacco, beer, salty snacks and packaged beverages remains strong. Thus, overall spend at Murphy stores is not only stable and resilient, it's growing. In the Murphy footprint, traffic-driving categories and fuel – including fuel and tobacco are bringing people to the store and growing the basket in the center store categories attached to the visit. Remarkably, total tobacco margin dollars were up 12% and nontobacco margin dollars were up 4.8%, material improvements against what was a very strong second quarter in 2023. The two-year stacks were up 17.8% and 15%, respectively, in tobacco and nontobacco margin growth, illustrating the powerful impact of Murphy's advantaged model and the resilience of our customer. Unpacking results at the category level, customer spend remains strong in beer and salty snacks, product that customers not only don't want to forego, but are buying more of, compelled by our value offer. Per store margin growth in beer and salty snacks were up 11% and 9%, respectively, offsetting softness in candy and lottery, where customers are making different choices. Packaged beverage, the largest center store category from a sales and margin perspective, has improved sequentially from the first quarter, exhibiting seasonal momentum, up 2.4% in per store margins, outpacing the Nielsen data and gaining market share in our footprint, driven by higher promotional intensity and carbonated soft drinks. General merchandise margin growth, the second largest center store category, was more robust, up 5.6%, reflecting improvements from our initiatives and cost of goods that are margin accretive. Of note, general merchandise is one of the areas we reimagined with our in-store experience campaign focused on enhancing performance at our larger format stores, adding 200 additional SKUs and 700 additional facings to optimize selling space. Early results are promising across center store categories as we enhance the customer experience, improve sales velocity and improve employee productivity. Looking at operating expenses. Second quarter OpEx on a per store basis was up 6.2% year-over-year, down sequentially from up 6.7% in the first quarter and remains on track to finish within our internal plan and the 2024 guided range. The primary drivers of OpEx growth remains the larger stores we are building, including raze-and-rebuilds, intentional wage investments we made in 2023, including elevating the assistant manager cohort and higher maintenance costs largely attributable to warranty expirations on dispensers we replaced for a large part of the network in 2018 and 2019 as part of our EMV compliance. Like the headwinds we are seeing in certain parts of the business, we're very confident in the future growth drivers that will create value, including maintaining a relentless focus on EDLP and value pricing, generating additional value and efficiency from our stores as part of our store productivity excellence campaign, leveraging the benefits of digital transformation to address and offset pockets of weakness in discretionary categories and ramping up new store additions in 2024 and 2025 and beyond. These are the building blocks of sustainable growth that are the material drivers of our $1.3 billion EBITDA target in 2028 and the catalyst to our flywheel. Our core fuel and tobacco categories continue to outperform, and our customer remains resilient, giving us further assurance we can meet this goal and continue our track record of delivering top-tier shareholder returns. I'll now turn the call over to Galagher to give you more color on how we are allocating our cash flow to grow the business and create value for shareholders. Galagher?