Thank you, Rob, and hello everyone. I'll now take you through our second quarter results in more details. On page three of the supplemental presentation, we provide our second quarter financial highlights. We generated net income of $6 million and diluted earnings per share at $0.63. Our results were driven once again by high quality portfolio and revenue growth and careful management of expenses, partially offset by increased funding costs and the net credit loss headwinds caused by macro economic conditions. Turning to page four and five, while demand remains strong, our tighter underwriting standards and collection focus led to a 6% decline in total origination from the prior year. By channel, digital and branch of origination were down by 19% and 7% respectively, and direct mail origination were up by 2%. As we've consistently noted, we've deliberately reduced originations in recent quarters as we appropriately balance growth with further enhancing the credit quality of our portfolio. Page six displays our portfolio growth and product mix through the second quarter. We close the quarter with net finance receivables of just under $1.7 billion, up $13 million from March 31 and slightly ahead of our guidance. As of the end of the second quarter, our large loan book comprised 73% of our total portfolio and 86% of our portfolio carried an APR at or below 36%. Looking ahead, we expect our ending net receivables in the third quarter to grow by approximately $50 million as we continue to monitor the economic environment and maintain our current underwriting standards. We remain focused on smart, controlled growth, particularly given the continued uncertainty around consumer's financial health. As circumstances dictate, we're prepared to further tighten our underwriting or lean back into growth, either of which could impact net receivables in the third quarter. As shown on page seven, our lighter branch footprint strategy and new states and branch consolidation actions and legacy states contributed to another solid, same-store year-over-year growth rate at 7% in the second quarter. Our receivables per branch remain right near all-time highs, coming in at $4.9 million at the end of the quarter. We believe considerable growth opportunities remain within our existing branch footprint under this more efficient model, particularly in more branches and newer states. Turning the page eight, total revenue grew 9% to $133 million in the second quarter. Our total revenue yield and interest and fee yield were 31.9% and 28.2% respectively. The year-over-year declining yield is attributable primarily to our continued mix shift towards larger higher quality loans and revenue reversals from the credit impact of macro-economic conditions. In the third quarter, we expect total revenue yield and interest and fee yield to be up by 40 basis points compared to the second quarter due to improvement in the credit performance and the impact of pricing increases on newer loans. We also anticipate that an improving credit environment and increased pricing will drive further benefits for yields in future quarters, particularly as our recent pricing actions rolled through the portfolio over time. Moving to page nine, our 30 plus day delinquency rate as at quarter end were 6.9% and our net credit loss rate in the second quarter is 13.1%. Our tightened underwriting contributed to our gradually improved delinquency profile from the prior quarter, while net credit loss is peaked in the second quarter as expected. In the third quarter, we expect our delinquency rate to increase only slightly compared to the second quarter, as the typical third quarter seasonal increase in delinquencies is largely mitigated by improving credit performance. In addition, we anticipate that net credit losses will be approximately $46.5 million in the third quarter, as the net credit loss rate comes off at second quarter high. This leaves that the portfolio and credit continue to perform as expected, particularly in our front book and credit tightening. Turning to page 10, our allowance for credit losses declined slightly in the second quarter. We released reserves of $2.4 million after incorporating a slightly more optimistic view of the macro environment into our reserve modeling, including a higher likelihood of a soft landing with a lower year end unemployment rate to 5.5% and a lower peak unemployment rate of 6.4% in the second quarter of next year. As a quarter end, the allowance was $181 million, or 10.7% of net finance receivable, down from 11% of net finance receivable as a March 31. The allowance continues to compare favorably into a 30 plus day contractual delinquency of $116 million. We expect to end the third quarter with a reserve rate between 10.5% and 10.6% subject to macro economic conditions. Assuming credit continues to improve, we would expect our reserve rate to decline further by year end. Over the long-term, under a normal economic environment, we continue to expect that our net credit loss rate will be in the range of 8.5% to 9% based on our current product mix and underwriting. And we believe that our reserve rate could drop to as low as 10% with the improvement attributable to our shift to higher quality loans. As we've always done however, we'll manage the business in a way that maximizes direct contribution margin and bottom line results. Flipping to page 11, we continue to closely manage our spend while still investing in our capabilities and strategic initiatives. G&A expenses for the second quarter were better than our prior guide, coming in at $57 million. Our annualized operating expense ratio was 13.6% in the second quarter, a 110 basis point improvement from the prior year period. We'll continue to manage our spending closely moving forward. In the third quarter, we expect G&A expenses to be approximately $63.5 million to support residuals growth and to continue to invest in several important technology, digital, and data and analytics projects that are critical to the modernization and evolution of our omnichannel business. Over the long term, we believe that these investments will drive addition, sustainable growth, improved credit performance, and greater operating leverage. Turning to page 12 and 13 are interest expense for the second quarter of $16 million, or 3.8% of average net receivables on an annualized basis. As a reminder, in the second quarter of last year, we experienced a $3 million mark-to-market benefits to interest expense and pre-tax income from our interest rate count. In the third quarter of 2023, we expect interest expense to be approximately $17 million or 4% of average net receivables, with the increase in expense primarily attributable to our expected portfolio growth. We continue to aggressively manage our exposure to rising interest rate, as 88% of our debt is fixed rate as of June 30th, with a weighted average coupon of 3.6% and a weighted average revolving duration of 1.6 years. As a result, despite the sharp increase in benchmark rates over the last 18 months, we've experienced a comparatively modest increase in interest expense as a percentage of average net receivables, a benefit of our interest rate management strategies that we expect to continue to enjoy throughout the balance of the year. We also continue to maintain a very strong balance sheet with low average, healthy reserves, ample liquidity to fund our growth and substantial protection against rising interest rates. As of the end of the second quarter, we had $641 million of unused capacity on our credit facilities and $147 million as available liquidity, consisting of unrestricted cash on hand and immediate availability to draw down on our revolving credit facilities. Our debt has staggered revolving duration stretching out to 2026, and since 2020, we've maintained a quarter-end unused borrowing capacity of between roughly $400 million and $700 million, demonstrating our ability to protect ourselves against short-term disruptions in the credit market. Our second quarter's funded debt-to-equity ratio remained a conservative 4.2 to 1. We have ample capacity to fund our business even if further access to the scrutinization market were to become restricted. We incurred an effective tax rate of 23% for the second quarter. For the third quarter, we expect an effective tax rate of approximately 24% prior to discrete items, such as any tax impact of equity compensation. We also continue to return capital to our shareholders. Our Board of Directors declared a dividend of $0.30 per common share for the third quarter. The dividend will be paid on September 14th, 2023 to shareholders of record as of the closed of business on August 23rd, 2023. We're pleased with our second quarter results with the strong balance sheet and are near and long-term prospects for controlled sustainable growth. That concludes my remarks. I'll now turn the call back over to Rob.