Thank you, Clay. NOV has consolidated the EBITDA and improved 15% year-over-year to $281 million, with margins improving 100 basis points to 12.7% of sales, reaching the highest level since 2015, supported by our $75 million cost-out program, which, as Clay mentioned, was substantially completed during the second quarter. Cash flow from operations was a healthy $432 million due to improvements in working capital and profitability. CapEx totaled $82 million, leading to free cash flow of $350 million and we continue to expect that we will convert over 50% of EBITDA to free cash flow for the year. Much improved cash flow realized in the second quarter reinforces our already strong confidence that NOV’s capital-light business model will generate substantial amounts of free cash flow over the coming years. Last quarter, we unveiled our return of capital framework that is aligned with our longstanding capital allocation priorities. As a reminder, priority one is to defend the balance sheet. As expected, during the second quarter, our net debt-to-EBITDA leverage ratio fell below 1 and our gross debt leverage ratio remained below 2, meaning we now consider the balance sheet to be an optimal condition, which paves the way to return a large portion of our future cash generation to shareholders while maintaining adequate financial flexibility. Second, we aim to properly maintain our asset base and invest in organic growth opportunities that drive superior risk-adjusted returns. During the second quarter, the bulk of our $82 million in capital expenditures was invested in building out our ability to support more of our customers with our latest efficiency-enhancing tools, technologies and services. Next, we always want to remain opportunistic regarding acquisitions and can accelerate strategic growth initiatives at attractive returns. In the second quarter, we completed our acquisition of Keystone Tower Systems, which I’ll talk more about in a moment, and we’re continuing to evaluate rifle-shot technology acquisitions that improve our strategic positioning. Lastly, we remain committed to returning at least 50% of our excess free cash flow, defined as cash flow from operations, less capital expenditures and other investments to our shareholders on an annual basis. During the quarter, we stepped up our return of capital by increasing our dividend 50%, which amounted to $30 million paid in the quarter. We also bought back 2 million shares at an average price of $18.50 per share, totaling an additional $37 million. In sum, we returned $67 million of capital to our shareholders during the second quarter. As I just mentioned, during the quarter, we completed the acquisition of the remaining minority interest in Keystone Tower Systems. With NOV’s help, Keystone developed a proprietary spiral welding manufacturing technology that we think will be a game-changer in the wind industry due to not only its potential to reduce the cost and time to manufacture wind towers, but even more so due to its potential to enable the manufacturing of towers in the field. This avoids the logistical challenges that prevent land wind farms from using taller towers, which can access stronger, more steady winds and utilize larger turbines. Using taller towers can significantly improve the economics of wind power and therefore expand the geographical areas where you can cost-effectively produce wind power outside of the wind belt and into regions with higher populations and energy demand. We made our initial investment in Keystone during 2019 and increased our financial investment over time, becoming the majority shareholder in 2023. We also increased our investment with human Capital over time by sharing our manufacturing expertise to help produce and sell Keystone’s first commercial tower sections and position the operation to be able to win a contract for 398-meter-tall wind towers from a major wind turbine, OEM. With this win, we elected to exercise an option to buy out the remaining minority shareholders and we are now working to significantly expand Keystone’s manufacturing capacity to begin making deliveries on this contract beginning mid-2025. This operation is really just getting started, but we’re excited about the long-term potential of this business. Moving on to our segment results. Our Energy Products and Services segment generated revenues of $1.050 billion in the second quarter, a 2% increase compared to the second quarter of 2023. EBITDA decreased $14 million to $184 million year-over-year or 17.5% of sales, due to a less favorable sales mix and a more challenging North American market. Sequentially, the segment realized 3% growth with 30% EBITDA flow-through. As a reminder, our Energy Products and Services segment generates income from three revenue streams, services and rentals, consumable products and sales of shorter-lived capital equipment. The segment sales mix for the quarter was 48% service and rentals, 20% product sales and 32% capital equipment sales. Revenue from service and rentals includes tubular coating and inspection services, solid control services, drilling data acquisition, analytics, and optimization services, and rentals of our downhole drilling tools, drill bits, and artificial lift equipment. During the second quarter, revenue from NOV service and rental businesses increased in the low-single digits’ year-over-year. With market share gains in the U.S., strong demand from international markets and the contribution from our new artificial lift business more than offsetting the 12% decline in North American drilling activity. Excluding the contribution from our artificial lift business, revenues from service and rentals declined in the low-single digits’ year-over-year. Revenue from drill bit rentals in the U.S. held flat from the second quarter of 2023, despite the 17% decline in the U.S. rig count. We realized strong growth in the Permian Basin from the rapid adoption of our latest bit and cutter designs, which coincided with many operators re-evaluating performance, bit designs and vendors as they optimize hole sizes across much of the basin. Growth in the Permian offset declines in other areas of the U.S., resulting from lower activity in gas basins and the cooling effect consolidation among oil and gas producers continues to have on activity. Internationally, bit rentals and borehole enlargement services improved slightly on increasing activity in the Middle East, more than offsetting lower activity in Latin America. Revenue from downhole tool rentals improved 3% from the second quarter of 2023. We realized a low- to mid-single-digit decline in North America against a rig count that decreased 12%, a result of rapidly growing adoption of our latest drilling technologies that allow operators to more efficiently drill high-pressure and long lateral wells. Demand for our tools is generally driven by footage drilled, but higher levels of drilling complexity require more of our technologies for efficient operations. For example, as customers push beyond 2-mile laterals, they’re realizing the benefit of running multiple zero-pressure drop agitators in their bottom-hole assembly. And for wells drilled with rotary steerable tools, our PosiTrack torsional vibration mitigation tool enables operators to maintain higher weight on bit, allowing them to drill further without damaging the BHA. While international revenue from downhole rentals was mostly flat year-over-year, we expect to realize strong growth over the mid- to long-term, driven by increasing activity in the unconventional plays of the Middle East. Revenue from solid control services realized a low single-digit growth rate compared to the second quarter of 2023. In North America, rapid adoption of NOV’s new Alpha shale shaker, which offers significantly higher cuttings handling capacities, greater safety and lower costs, mostly offset meaningfully lower drilling activity in North America. Revenues from the Eastern Hemisphere improved on higher activity levels and increasing adoption of new technologies, including the Alpha shaker and our iNOVaTHERM Waste Treatment System, which efficiently treats oil-based drilling waste at the wellsite, allowing customers to eliminate the costly transport costs while meeting all environmental requirements for disposal. Revenues from rentals of our drilling data acquisition systems improved year-over-year, with a low single-digit decline in North America being more than offset by improved activity in the Eastern Hemisphere. Our Downhole Broadband Solutions wired drill pipe services operation is gearing up for a big 2025. Sequential revenues were mostly flat, but profitability declined, with the operation beginning to carry additional costs as it readies itself for significant growth. As noted in our significant achievements, we signed a framework agreement with a major Norwegian oil and gas producer associated with their intent to deploy our services across their rigged fleet. We also recently had two additional significant customer wins with our DBS offering. After completing a drilling campaign months ahead of schedule and with better well placement than the customer expected, leading to improved productivity, an operator extended its contracts with us for another two years. And earlier this week, after realizing strong results from a trial with our DBS services, a major NOC in the Middle East awarded us contracts for one offshore and one land rig to begin operations at the end of the year. Lastly, our Tuboscope operations experienced a low- to-mid single-digit decline in revenues on lower demand for inspections of oilfield tubulars and for drill pipe coating in the U.S. Revenue from product sales, which include consumable products used in drilling and completion operations, improved in the mid to low 20% range year-over-year and excluding the acquisition of our artificial lift business was up low single digits. The small year-over-year increase was primarily the result of higher product sales in the Eastern Hemisphere from our Tuboscope operations, including our pipe connection systems and sleeves and bulk powder coating shipments. A low 20% increase in sales of completion tools with significant gains in the Middle East, North Sea and North America, and an increase of bulk drill bit sales into Africa and Asia. These increases were partially offset by lower sales of fishing tools and components for managed pressure drilling equipment. Sales of capital equipment within the segment, including composite pipe and tanks, drill pipe, conductor pipe, shell shakers and managed pressure drilling equipment fell in the low-to-mid single digits compared to the prior year, due primarily to lower drill pipe sales, which declined in low 20% range due to a sharp falloff in demand from U.S. land markets, partially offset by improving demand from international land markets. The decline in our drill pipe business was more than offset by higher deliveries of MPD equipment and a modest improvement in sales of fiberglass equipment, where there’s growing demand from composite pipe in the oil and gas fields of the Middle East, and for corrosion resistant composite tubulars and tanks for use in FPSOs. Bookings for our fiberglass business increased 25% sequentially and include orders for 462 kilometers of fiber spar spoolable pipe and 128 kilometers of bond strand pipe destined for the Middle East. For the third quarter, we expect revenues for our Energy Products and Services segment to be flat to up in the low single-digit percent range when compared to the third quarter of 2023, with EBITDA between $175 million and $190 million. Our Energy Equipment segment generated revenues of $1.204 billion in the second quarter of 2024, an $87 million or 8% increase year-over-year compared to the second quarter of 2023. EBITDA improved $43 million to $142 million or 11.8% of sales, representing an incremental flow through of 49%. The outsized incremental margin was a result of cost savings, the improving quality of our backlog and a more favorable sales mix. Double-digit revenue growth from both international land and offshore markets more than offset a slight decline in sales into the North American land market year-over-year. Normalizing for the divestiture of the segment’s Pole Products business, revenue increased roughly 10% year-over-year. As a reminder, this segment is primarily a later cycle capital equipment business that has two revenue streams, equipment sales and aftermarket sales and services. During the second quarter, equipment sales accounted for approximately 54% of the segment’s revenues. Aftermarket sales and service accounted for the remaining 46%. Segment’s capital equipment sales increased in the mid-single-digit percent range or roughly 10% when normalized for the divestiture of our Pole Products business and aftermarket revenue improved in the upper single digits relative to the second quarter of 2023. Most of our aftermarket revenue comes from our large installed base of drilling equipment and Intervention & Stimulation Equipment. Our rig equipment business saw a high-teens percent increase in its aftermarket revenue year-over-year, led by higher spare parts sales and a significant increase in projects to reactivate, recertify and upgrade offshore rigs. As offshore rigs have gone back to work and idle rigs that could have been cannibalized for parts have diminished, excess inventories of spare parts have been depleted by our customers and their fleets of active rigs are now providing steady demand for spare parts, recertifications and special purpose survey work, which are typically done once every five years. And as the global fleet ages, recertifications are requiring more parts and services, leading to strong aftermarket demand for NOV at the leading OEM in the space. In addition to traditional aftermarket spares and service, we’re building a steady stream of recurring revenues from subscription services that include support from our 24x7 remote support center, which is currently monitoring 244 offshore rigs, regular updates and support from our NOVOS multi-machine control and process automation systems, where we currently have 125 systems deployed, 26 being installed and another 63 in our backlog. And support for our recently introduced robotic systems that has been rapid adoption during the second quarter, including new orders for another 10 systems from eight different drilling contractors. Our Intervention & Stimulation Equipment units’ aftermarket revenues were down in the low-teens year-over-year due to declines in North American activity. While we may not have quite reached the bottom in demand for aftermarket parts and services in the North American completions market, demand from international markets continues to improve and should begin to more than offset sluggish demand in North America. Moving to the capital equipment side of the business, as we mentioned in our last call, we had a significant order slip from Q1 into Q2, which contributed to a very strong level of orders and a book-to-bill of 177% during the second quarter. Book-to-bill for the first half of 2024 was 129%. Orders for large pieces of capital equipment are inherently lumpy, so we don’t get too excited about bookings in any individual quarter, but instead focus on what our customers are telling us related to their upcoming needs. And what we’re hearing from them suggests that we can expect bookings to remain solid in the second half of the year. During the second quarter, we posted a significant year-over-year improvement in sales of drilling equipment. Land deliveries increased on improved progress on Saudi newbuilds and a sizable increase in top drive and iron roughneck deliveries. Offshore capital sales growth has been driven by pull-through from rig reactivations and a general uptick in automation upgrades. Offshore activity remains strong and we expect continued reactivations and recertifications from the aging fleet to drive upgrades that will require meaningful capital equipment orders. Revenue for Marine and Construction business posted a slight decline compared to the second quarter of 2023, with higher revenues from cableway vessels and electric cranes not quite offsetting lower revenues from wind turbine installation vessels. Orders were solid for offshore wind and construction business, and we booked a repeat order for our NG-20000 WTIV design and jacking system for Europe’s largest installation vessel owner in the offshore wind space. Despite delayed FIDs and inflationary impact on developers’ projects, the outlook for orders of WTIVs, cableway vessels and heavy lift equipment for FPSOs and offshore construction vessels remains promising, with the possibility of one to two more vessels in the second half of the year. Capital equipment sales by our Intervention & Stimulation Equipment business improved almost 10% compared to the second quarter of 2023. Solid execution from the business unit’s growing backlog of wireline equipment and higher shipments of coil tubing equipment more than offset only slightly lower shipments of pressure pumping equipment. Despite soft demand from North America, the business posted its fourth straight quarter with a book-to-bill better than 1 on continued strength and demand for wireline and coil tubing equipment from international markets. Our process systems operation achieved a low single-digit revenue increase year-over-year resulting from the strong execution on a large processing module for the North Sea. We expect a modest step down in revenues from this operation in the third quarter, but longer term, the outlook for this operation is bright and we’re seeing growing demand for new monoethylene glycol units, which are sizable, higher margin FPSO modules where our process systems team provides unmatched capabilities and experience. Our Production and Midstream business saw mid-teen percentage improvement in revenue compared to the second quarter of 2023 with a large increase in shipments of production chokes in the Middle East outweighing softer demand for chokes and pumps in North America. Lastly, our subsea flexible pipe business unit continued to capitalize on robust demand for subsea flexible pipe. The business has increased its backlog by more than 80% over the last year, achieving an all-time high and providing a clear path to significant topline growth with much improved margins beginning in 2025. Awareness of limited remaining industry production capacity is driving operators to place orders further in advance, creating a positive outlook for additional orders, some of which are now for delivery stretching into 2027. For the third quarter, we expect revenues for our Energy Equipment segment to be flat to up a couple% compared to the third quarter of 2023, with EBITDA between $140 million and $160 million. With that, we’ll now open the call to questions.