Thanks, Brady, and thank you for all for joining us this morning. As a reminder, we will discuss our results and outlook. Please keep in mind there continue to be TSAs and CMAs with our former parent, which we are rapidly phasing out. In addition, reconciliations of all non-GAAP financial measures that I will discuss can be found in today's press release. Moving to Page 9 in the deck. In Q1, we generated $846 million in adjusted total sales, up slightly versus a year ago. Our aftermarket business benefited from higher pricing and positive FX for an increase of 3.1%, whereas Fuel Systems was impacted by lower CV revenue in Europe, offset by inflationary price pass-through. Our adjusted diluted earnings per share was $1.08. We earned $97 million in adjusted operating income and $131 million of adjusted EBITDA, resulting in an adjusted operating margin of 11.5%, which represents a year-over-year increase of 170 basis points, while the adjusted EBITDA margin of 15.5% represented a year-over-year increase of 160 basis points. Of note, when compared to the prior year, the results in both the first and second quarters of 2023 reflect timing differences, making for uneven comparisons for these 2 periods. More specifically, the first quarter of 2024 benefited from the pass-through of inflation whereas in 2023, a portion of pass-through was delayed to the second quarter. A supplier settlement of $10 million, of which $7 million is a onetime retroactive recovery. And finally, we had strong product sales mix and a favorable currency impact. From a core business performance standpoint, our segments reported strong overall margins. Q1 segment adjusted operating margins were healthy at 13.6% as our aftermarket segment expanded to 17.9% on the back of inflationary price pass-through and positive product sales mix. Q1 Fuel Systems margins were strong at 10.8%, similar to Q4, but ahead of the same period of the prior year due to the pass-through of inflationary prices and a supplier settlement for an issue that plagued us during 2023. Note that this is included in our full year guidance, although the timing was unknown. Corporate costs were $18 million in the quarter compared with $9 million in the same period of the prior year. The largest driver of this year was the buildup of our stand-alone corporate function as we separated from our former parent company. We continue to expect approximately $20 million in quarterly corporate costs going forward, in line with projections provided last year at spin. Let me now bridge our revenue and EBITDA, which you can find on Pages 10 and 11 in the presentation. Our adjusted sales performance in the quarter was affected by softness in volume and mix, which was a headwind of $7 million, mainly due to lower CV sales in Europe. By contrast, we saw a favorable sales benefit from inflationary cost pass-through of $12 million and FX was a tailwind this quarter of $6 million. Inflationary pressures have mainly receded with only small pockets of residual increases remaining. Negotiation of customer price recovery was finalized in Q2 of 2023 versus lump sum and results in program and segment profitability, moving in line with expectation on a more consistent basis after this period. Turning to Page 11. The quarter saw favorable pricing pass-through of $12 million in addition to supplier savings of $19 million. Employee and other production costs were an offset of $17 million. Of the $19 million in supplier savings, $10 million relates to settlement of the 2023 supplier issue previously noted. The $10 million settlement breaks down further into $7 million of retroactive non-run rate funding and $3 million of reduced part costs to be more in line with market cost. Corporate costs were up $9 million, in line with expectations and partially offset by $3 million in reduced R&D and other SG&A costs. Q1 cash from operations were $31 million. During the quarter, we generated free cash flow of $13 million as we continue to be disciplined in management of our working capital and drive optimization of resources and processes on a daily basis. Capital spend was slightly higher in the quarter on a run rate basis, but still projected to come in for the full year guidance of 4% of revenue. Next, turning to our liquidity. We ended the quarter with $325 million in cash, $424 million of committed revolver availability. Our net leverage is less than 1x EBITDA. We are committed to a strong financial foundation and having ample liquidity to run our business and execute our strategy. To that end, subsequent to quarter end, we issued $525 million principal amount of 6.75% senior secured notes due 2029 with interest to be paid semiannually. Due to strong investor demand, we upsized the offering from the original $425 million planned. The notes bear interest at an annual rate of 6.75% and we used the net proceeds to repay the outstanding borrowings under our term loan B facility and the $75 million we had drawn down on our revolving credit facility. As a consequence, we have no outstanding draws and the entire $500 million of our revolver is available to us. Additional funds were used to pay fees and expenses in connection with the offering and for general corporate purposes. This issuance helped us meet one of our many financial goals for the year and provides a stronger, more cost-effective capital structure while improving our liquidity. Moving next to our 2024 guidance. As Brady and I both mentioned, our first quarter results are trending in line with our full year guidance. As a result, we are reaffirming the guidance we presented on the last earnings call. Overall, we expect strong earnings and cash generation in 2024 as we continue to drive operational efficiencies, exit agreements with our former parent and grow our aftermarket sales. In closing, I want to reiterate Brady's message regarding our focus on financial discipline and generating strong shareholder returns. And with that, we'll now move to the Q&A portion of our call. Pauly?