Thanks Will. We've discussed our views on balance sheet and cost leadership, but the third part of our strategy is opportunistically investing during the down cycle. If we step back for a second, we recognize that the oil and gas industry will always have volatility. And it is our belief that this volatility creates the potential for outsized value creation. We firmly believe that investments made during lower commodity prices drive greater long-term shareholder value. But to capitalize on that opportunity, you have to have both the balance sheet capacity and the willingness to deploy capital when it's natural reaction to pull back. During times like this, our goal is to buy the highest quality assets with long-dated low breakeven inventory in the bottom half of the commodity cycle, and we've recently done that in two ways. First, with our buyback of PR shares in early April and second with our New Mexico bolt-on we announced yesterday. We'll hit both of those in more detail now. Yesterday, we announced the $608 million bolt-on acquisition in New Mexico, directly offsetting and overlapping our existing acreage and operational footprint. This acquisition was entirely in Eddy and Lea Counties and consists of approximately 12 Boe a day, 13,300 net acres and 8,700 net royalty acres. The proximity of these assets to our legacy position will allow us to quickly and efficiently bring our peer-leading cost structure to bear on the newly acquired assets, further enhancing returns. This acquisition also adds over 100 new gross operated locations in our core operating areas that immediately compete for capital, while also materially increasing working interest in existing legacy PR units. In addition, the acquisition comes with another 4,500 non-op acres that provide the opportunity to leverage our highly effective ground game to maximize value through trades and further consolidation. The existing production has a lower decline than most acquisitions we have evaluated recently but what really differentiates these assets is the quality and duration of the inventory. Strong well productivity combined with high NRIs and low development costs, allow these acquired locations to breakeven as low as $30 per barrel. This combination of high return investments and low declines will allow us to maintain production with just a 35% reinvestment rate over the long-term. We're excited about the opportunity to invest in our core operating areas at below mid-cycle prices and think the purchase price metrics reflect that value proposition. The $608 million purchase price implies an attractive value of approximately $12,500 per net acre and $6,000 per net royalty acre. This works out to about $2 million per net location, and all-in, we expect the deal to generate in excess of 5% free cash flow per share accretion in the near-term, midterm and long-term. We'd like to reiterate that we've been maintaining a very disciplined and consistent approach to M&A during our seven years as a private company and nearly three years as a public company. And as such, Slide 8 should be familiar to all of you. Given the high quality of our business today and specifically the depth of our low breakeven inventory, the bar is very high when it comes to potential acquisitions. But we are confident this acquisition exceeds all of our rigorous investment criteria. First, we acquired these assets at an attractive valuation where we are highly confident we can exceed our return thresholds. Second, this transaction is accretive to all key financial metrics. Third, this allows us to add very high-quality inventory that competes for capital immediately in areas that we know well. Fourth, we're able to execute this opportunity while maintaining our fortress balance sheet and expect it to exit the year with over $3 billion in liquidity and leverage below 1x. But finally and most importantly, we believe this transaction makes our business better and will increase free cash flow per share and returns to investors over the long-term. We have a very long and successful track record of M&A that creates value for our shareholders and are highly confident that this transaction builds upon that. Turning to Slide 9, we want to continue to emphasize that protecting the balance sheet is a key component of our long-term strategy. Pro forma for the New Mexico bolt-on our balance sheet remains strong at current prices with leverage less than 1x and a dividend breakeven of approximately $40, comparing very favorably to our historical metrics and our peers. We are confident we have the dry powder to continue to execute on acquisitions or share buybacks in scale if additional opportunities were to arise. The final piece of our downturn strategy is opportunistic share buybacks and we’ve been consistent and disciplined in our approach to buybacks since PR’s inception. What we want to accomplish with buybacks is to increase ownership in our business in a cost effective manner. To put it simply, we can buy back more shares with the same amount of money during a downturn when prices are lower. And in a volatile industry like ours, we are confident that the dislocations and opportunities will always present themselves over time. Having prepared accordingly, we execute buybacks immediately during the period of heightened volatility in early April. In a relatively small window, we bought 4.1 million shares at an average price of $10.52. We want to use buybacks as efficiently as possible and will be ready to lean in during the next clear market dislocation. We are very fortunate that our team’s focus on balance sheet strength has left us in a position to not treat buybacks or acquisitions as an either or, but where we can execute on both in scale as opportunities present themselves in 2025 and beyond. Turning to Slide 11. We’re excited to roll out a revised plan where we project more production and lower CapEx than the original plan we rolled out in February. Our recent production outperformance allows us to reduce our capital budget by $50 million, while maintaining production at the high end of our guidance range. This reduction in CapEx will come from a combination of reductions and completion in drilling activity in the second half of the year. As such, we still expect Q2 to be the highest CapEx quarter of the year with a step down in CapEx in the second half. As we’ve outlined for the past several years, our reinvestment and capital allocation decisions are very dynamic and we adjust our plans to reflect the returns, we anticipate in the coming environment. Our business remains highly flexible to react to the ever changing macro and we will continue to monitor all of the moving pieces and adopt a plan that maximizes long-term shareholder value. We believe this strategy will position us to further our track record of outsized value creation for shareholders. Thank you for tuning in today. And now we will turn it back to the operator for Q&A.