Thank you, Rick, and good afternoon to you all. I am pleased to provide additional details about our second quarter results, which reflect another strong quarter of performance, producing net income of $152 million or $0.98 per diluted share, in line with the prior quarter. Adjusted diluted net operating income per share was slightly higher than the GAAP metric at $0.99 for the second quarter, compared to $1.03 for the previous quarter. We generated a 13.6% annualized return on equity in the second quarter, which helped to grow our book value per share 12% year-over-year to $29.66. This book value per share growth is in addition to our regular stockholder dividends, which were $37 million during the quarter, reflecting our quarterly dividend of $0.245 per share. We also repurchased $50 million of shares during the second quarter. Turning now to the detailed drivers of our results. Our revenues continue to be strong in the second quarter. We generated $321 million of total revenues during the quarter compared to $319 million in the first quarter and $290 million in the second quarter of 2023. Slides 10 through 12 in our presentation include details on our mortgage insurance in force portfolio as well as other key factors impacting our net premiums earned. Our primary mortgage insurance in force continued to grow, reaching $273 billion as of the end of the second quarter and generating $235 million in net premiums earned in the quarter. We wrote $13.9 billion of new insurance written in the second quarter of 2024, an increase from $11.5 billion written in the prior quarter. This contributed positively to the growth of our insurance in force. The persistency rate of our existing insurance in-force also remained high at 84% in the second quarter based on the trailing 12 months, compared to 83% a year ago. As of the end of the second quarter 74% of our insurance in-force had a mortgage rate of 6% or less. Given current mortgage interest rates, which meaningfully exceed these levels these policies are less likely to cancel due to refinancing in the near term. We continue to expect our persistency rates to remain strong given current mortgage rates and the overall economic outlook. As shown on slide 12, the in-force portfolio premium yield for our mortgage insurance portfolio remained stable in the quarter at 38.2 basis points. With strong persistency rates and the current positive industry pricing environment, we expect our in-force portfolio premium yield to continue to remain stable for the remainder of the year. The total net yield of our insured portfolio can fluctuate from period to period due to other factors such as changes in our risk distribution programs and profit commissions earned. Our net investment income was $74 million in the second quarter. The increase in our net investment income has been driven by increases over the past year in both the size and average yield of our investment portfolio as well as an increase in income from our mortgage loans held-for-sale within Radian Mortgage Capital. The $74 million of net investment income this quarter includes $5 million related to mortgage loans held-for-sale within Radian Mortgage Capital. Excluding that impact, net investment income grew 9% year-over-year. As we continue to reinvest cash flows in the current rate environment, we expect our average investment portfolio yield to continue to increase. Our unrealized net loss on investments reflected in stockholders' equity was $377 million at quarter end. We expect that our strong liquidity and cash flow position will provide us with the ability to hold these securities to recovery of the unrealized losses, which would equate to $2.50 that is expected to accrete back into our book value per share over time. I will now move on to our provision for losses. Credit trends continue to be extremely positive. Similar to previous quarters, our defaults continue to cure at rates greater than our previous expectations, resulting in releases of prior period results that in recent years have significantly offset reserves established for new defaults. Our favourable loss experience continues to be driven primarily by the significant embedded homeowner equity resulting from the strong home price appreciation experienced in recent years. On slide 16 we provide trends for our primary default inventory. Total defaults declined to approximately 20,000 loans at quarter end, resulting in a portfolio default rate of 2% a decline from 2.1% in the prior quarter. As shown on slide 17 our core trends have been very consistent and positive in recent periods with approximately 90% of defaults curing within four quarters and 97% curing within eight quarters meaningfully exceeding our initial expectations. Cure rates in the second quarter exhibited typical seasonal trends and compare favourably to similar periods from prior years. The number of new defaults reported to us by services was approximately 11,100 in the second quarter of 2024, a decline of 6% from the previous quarter. We continue to maintain our default-to-claim roll rate assumption for new defaults at 8%, which resulted in $48 million of loss provision for new defaults reported during the quarter. Positive reserve development on prior period defaults of $50 million more than offset this provision for new defaults, resulting in a net benefit of $2 million in our mortgage insurance provision for losses in the second quarter. Moving on to our other business lines. As a reminder last quarter, we implemented a change to streamline our segment reporting and summarize the activity for several of our business lines into all other. Total revenues in all other were $40 million in the second quarter an increase compared to $34 million in the prior quarter. The adjusted pre-tax operating loss for all other was $6 million this quarter or $1.4 million before corporate expense allocations. Now turning on to our other expenses. For the second quarter, our other operating expenses totalled $92 million, an increase compared to $83 million recognized in the first quarter. Expenses in the second quarter included the impact of our annual share-based incentive grants, as well as an increase in severance and related expenses. As Rick noted, we have taken significant actions to improve our efficiency and operating leverage across Radian. As a result of these actions compared to our expense run rate, which was $348 million for the full year 2023, we expect an improvement in 2024 and to see the full benefit of a run rate reduction of $20 million to $25 million in annual operating expense beginning in 2025 based on current operations. While we continue to actively manage our operating expenses and seek opportunities for additional efficiencies, it is important to note that expenses can fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter due to changes in line items, such as variable incentive compensation and investments in strategic growth initiatives. Moving on to our capital, available liquidity and related strategic actions. The financial position of our primary operating subsidiary Radian Guaranty remained strong. Radian Guaranty paid a $200 million ordinary dividend to Radian Group this quarter, an increase from the $100 million ordinary dividend that Radian Guaranty has paid for each of the last five quarters. The PMIERs cushion remained stable at $2.2 billion even after this higher dividend. At the beginning of the year, we provided guidance that we expected Radian Guaranty to pay $400 million to $500 million of ordinary dividends to Radian Group for the full year 2024. Radian Guaranty continues to generate strong earnings and release contingency reserves in material amounts. As a result, Radian Guaranty has already paid $300 million of ordinary dividends in just the first half of the year. I will briefly walk you through the mechanics of the ordinary dividend capacity at Radian Guaranty, which is also highlighted in Slide 21 of our investor presentation. Ordinary dividends from Radian Guaranty are paid from its statutory unassigned funds. Given Radian Guaranty's strong PMIERs position, we've been able to maximize our ordinary dividends paid in recent quarters, closely mirroring the previous quarter's ending unassigned funds balance subject to other statutory limitations. We expect to continue to maximize our ordinary distributions from Radian Guaranty in future periods as well. For the second quarter, the ending unassigned funds balance for Radian Guaranty was $186 million providing us capacity to pay a dividend of approximately $185 million to Radian Group in the third quarter of this year with another dividend expected in the fourth quarter. Statutory unassigned funds and therefore future ordinary distributions will continue to be driven by Radian Guaranty's ongoing earnings as well as the contingency reserve release schedule shown on Slide 22. As Rick mentioned earlier in June 2024, Radian Guaranty entered into a quota share reinsurance agreement with a panel of third-party reinsurance providers consistent with our use of risk distribution strategies to effectively manage capital and proactively mitigate risk. Under this 2024 QSR agreement, we expect to see 25% of new insurance written between July 1, 2024 and June 30, 2025 subject to certain conditions. Moving to our holding company Radian Group. Yesterday we announced the redemption of our 2024 senior notes in the amount of $450 million payable in September 2024. As described earlier this year, we expect this action will reduce our ongoing interest expense by approximately $20 million annually and reduce our debt-to-capital ratio to below 20%. Once complete, Radian will have no senior debt maturities due until 2027. Additionally in the second quarter we increased our share repurchase program from $300 million to $900 million and extended the program to June 30, 2026. Within the quarter, we repurchased 1.6 million shares at a total cost of $50 million for an average price of $31.79 per share. As of the end of the second quarter, our current share repurchase authorization had $667 million remaining, as demonstrated by this prior quarter's repurchase activity and our track record in recent years we believe that share repurchase provides an attractive option to deploy our excess capital. Our available holding company liquidity increased to approximately $1.2 billion at the end of the second quarter. We also have an undrawn credit facility with borrowing capacity of $275 million providing us with significant financial flexibility. I will now turn the call back over to Rick.