Thanks, Tony. RGA reported pretax adjusted operating income of $421 million for the quarter or $4.72 per share after tax. For the trailing 12 months, adjusted operating return on equity, excluding notable items, was 14.3%. After a strong first quarter, this quarter's results were below expectations, driven primarily by claims volatility in U.S. individual life and unfavorable claims in one of the businesses within U.S. group, which I'll expand on shortly. Aside from the financial results, we have made good progress on several strategic initiatives in the quarter, including materially improving our capital position. As a result of further balance sheet optimization and the recognition of the additional value of in-force business in certain capital models, our excess capital increased to $3.8 billion at the end of Q2. Pro forma for the Equitable transaction, which I'll discuss in more detail, excess capital was $2.3 billion. Similarly, our deployable capital increased to $3.4 billion at the end of the quarter. During the period, we deployed $276 million into in-force transactions. Our nonspread portfolio yield, excluding variable investment income, was 4.98% in Q2, up 8 basis points from the first quarter. Total variable investment income was strong at $105 million, significantly higher than last quarter and now favorable for the year. The results were primarily due to realizations in our limited partnerships and real estate joint venture sales. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 25.2% on adjusted operating income before taxes, above the expected range of 23% to 24%, primarily due to the establishment of valuation allowances on foreign tax credits. We are still expecting a tax rate of 23% to 24% for the full year. Yesterday, we announced the closing of the previously discussed transaction with Equitable. I would like to provide additional details regarding certain closing terms. The transaction is effective April 1, which was mutually agreed versus an alternative of July 1. When reviewing the Q2 claims experience and overall results on the assumed block, we found it to be in line with our expectations and thus found it beneficial to accept an earlier effective date. Our review of the experience also helped affirm the reasonableness of our actuarial and pricing assumptions. Although it's effective April 1, we will only report 6 months of earnings in our 2025 GAAP results. The Q2 earnings on the block are estimated to be $30 million, in line with our expectations and these will be deferred and amortized into earnings over the life of the transaction. For the second half of 2025, we still expect pretax operating income contributions of approximately $70 million, increasing to $160 million to $170 million in 2026 and approximately $200 million per year by 2027. Turning to biometric claims experience as outlined on Slide 8 of our earnings presentation. This displays the total company claims experience and the related financial statement impacts on a quarterly basis. As mentioned earlier, claims experience was unfavorable in the quarter, primarily driven by the U.S. Traditional segment. For the company, economic claims experience was lower than expected by $256 million with a corresponding $158 million unfavorable current period financial impact. Claims experience was unfavorable in U.S. individual life primarily due to higher large claims offsetting the favorable experience from Q1. For the year, the economic claims experience for U.S. individual life is broadly in line with expectations. The current period financial impact was significant due to the proportion of claims in capped cohorts. Claims in U.S. group were also higher than expected, driven by our healthcare excess business, consistent with recent industry trends. Other lines within U.S. Group performed in line with expectations. We think that the current challenges within the healthcare excess block can be remediated in a reasonable time frame given its short tail and our ability to reprice quickly and modify underwriting. We have already begun taking pricing action and expect that the majority of the block will be repriced by January 2026. Looking at the second half of the year, our assumption is that the group business overall will be approximately breakeven versus an expectation of $20 million to $30 million for the remainder of the year. We expect to see improvement in the results as we move through 2026. Claims in Canada and EMEA were modestly unfavorable, while APAC experience was favorable. As we've seen in the first 2 quarters, volatility on a quarterly basis, both positive and negative, is normal and does not necessarily include a material trend. As shown on Page 8 of our presentation, on a longer-term basis, economic claims experience for the total company has been favorable by $272 million since the beginning of 2023 when we fully emerged -- more fully emerged from COVID. U.S. Individual Life represents approximately $75 million of this favorable experience. As a reminder, the favorable economic experience that has not been recognized through the accounting results will be recognized over the remaining life of the business. As a result of our substantial new business activity year-to-date, the value of in-force business margins totaled $41 billion at the end of the quarter, an increase of approximately $4 billion year-to-date, with approximately $2 billion coming from new business. This excludes the impact of the Equitable transaction, which will be included in our Q3 results. We will provide a more detailed update on the value of in-force business margins with our Q3 results. For the year, consolidated net premiums were up 14% year-over-year when adjusted for the impact from U.S. PRT transactions, which can cause premiums to fluctuate. Our traditional business premium growth was 11% year-to-date on a constant currency basis, which has benefited from strong growth in the U.S., EMEA and Asia. Premiums are a good indicator of the ongoing strength of our traditional business, and we continue to have strong momentum across our regions. Turning now to capital. Our excess capital increased to an estimated $3.8 billion at the end of Q2 or $2.3 billion pro forma for the Equitable transaction. The increase is primarily due to the recognition within certain capital frameworks of additional value of in-force credits related to business already on our books. We recently satisfied the strict external requirements needed to include these balances in our capital metrics. Note that excess capital considers our 3 main capital lenses, corresponding to RGA's internal economic capital model, local regulatory capital across our main legal entities and rating agency capital methodologies. Our deployable capital at Q2 increased to an estimated $3.4 billion due to similar reasons I just highlighted. As a quick reminder, this measure represents management's estimates of the capital available to be deployed in 2 transactions or returned to shareholders over the next 12 months, taking into account estimated capital sources and committed uses over that forward-looking 12-month period, including the impact of the Equitable transaction. Our strong balance sheet, capital management toolkit and current levels of excess and deployable capital position us well to continue to support an attractive new business pipeline with existing capital. We will balance the deployment into the business with returning capital to shareholders through quarterly dividends, which we just increased 4.5% to $0.93 per share and share repurchases. Regarding share repurchases, our intention in the short to intermediate term is to be active but opportunistic quarter-by-quarter, depending on our capital position, a forward view of our transaction pipeline, as well as valuation metrics. Over the longer term, we would expect total shareholder return of capital through dividends and share repurchases to range between 20% to 30% of after-tax operating earnings on average, consistent with our long-term history. Moving to the quarterly segment results on Slide 6. The U.S. and Latin America traditional results reflected unfavorable claims experienced as previously discussed. For the year, the economic claims experience in U.S. Individual Life is broadly in line with expectations. The U.S. Financial Solutions results were higher than expected due to higher variable investment income and higher investment yields. As a reminder, the Equitable transaction will be recorded within this segment. Canada traditional results reflected modestly unfavorable group results in individual life claims experience. The Financial Solutions results reflected favorable longevity experience. In the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, the traditional results reflected unfavorable claims experience, partially offset by favorable other experience. EMEA's Financial Solutions results were above expectations, reflecting favorable longevity experience, higher variable investment income and higher investment margins due to ongoing growth. Turning to our Asia Pacific region. The traditional results were good, reflecting favorable claims experience across the region. Financial Solutions results were favorable, primarily due to higher variable investment income and ongoing growth of the business. Finally, the Corporate and Other segment reported an adjusted operating loss before tax of $32 million, favorable compared to the expected quarterly average run rate. This was primarily due to higher variable investment income. Moving to investments on Slides 9 through 12. The nonspread book yield, excluding variable investment income rose to 4.98% primarily due to higher new money rates, which increased to 6.53% and remain well above the portfolio yield. The total nonspread portfolio yield for the quarter was 5.31%, up from last quarter, reflecting higher variable investment income and higher new money rates. Variable investment income was strong for the period, driven by increased realizations in limited partnerships and real estate joint venture sales. I'll note that we still hold an above average level of cash that we look to deploy opportunistically over the coming quarters. Importantly, portfolio quality remains high and credit impairments are in line with expectations for the year. And we believe the portfolio remains well positioned. During the quarter, we continued our long track record of increasing book value per share. As shown on Slide 16, our book value per share, excluding AOCI and impact from B36 embedded derivatives, increased to $156.63 which represents a compounded annual growth rate of 9.7% since the beginning of 2021. To summarize, following a strong first quarter, this quarter's results were impacted by claims experienced in our U.S. traditional segment. Importantly, we continue to advance many strategic objectives. Our long-term strategy remains well on track and we are confident in our ability to deliver on our intermediate-term financial targets. We continue to see good opportunities across our geographies and business lines and remain well capitalized to execute on our strategic plan. We also believe we are in a position to return excess capital to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. With that, I would like to thank everyone for your continued interest in RGA. This concludes our prepared remarks. We would now like to open it up for questions.