Thanks, Jamie, and good morning, everyone. We continue to outperform the market, growing brokerage volume by 10% year-over-year, with substantial market share gains enabled by our people and technology. We’ve been investing in artificial intelligence for the last decade. Our industry-leading pricing algorithms helped fuel brokerage gross margin of 15.4% in the quarter despite softness in the freight cycle. RXO’s pricing suite of products is pinged to hundreds of thousands of times daily, which allows us to benefit from best-in-class dynamic pricing. I recently hosted an AI webcast with a few of our technology leaders to highlight this differentiated homegrown technology. In the second quarter, 96% of our loads were created or covered digitally versus 80% in the second quarter of 2022. Seven-day carrier retention was a strong 78% in the quarter, compared to 73% in the second quarter of 2022. While carriers exited the market during the quarter, albeit at a slow rate, RXO’s platform continued to benefit from carrier adoption. Q2 active network carriers increased by 2% sequentially and we grew weekly active users by 3% on a year-on-year basis. This quarter, we were again in an evitable position with contractual volume representing 79% of our business, up 200 basis points sequentially and up 600 basis points when compared to the second quarter of 2022. On a two-year stack, contract volume growth was up 49%, accelerating from 42% in the prior quarter. As we approach the bottom of this freight cycle, I wanted to review how our contract and spot mix can shift during an upturn. While we’ll still haul the same contractual freight, our best-in-class service to our contract customers will yield spot volume, mini bids and special projects. Our spot mix can increase quickly on a sequential basis. Revenue per load continues to be impacted by declining fuel prices, increased LTL synergy loads and length of haul, which was down year-over-year as last year’s port diversion volume did not reoccur. When compared to the second quarter of 2022 revenue on a per mile basis declined at a rate less than revenue per load. Given recent market developments, I thought it would be helpful to give a bit more color on our monthly trends in the quarter and expand on our current view of the freight cycle. I’ll refer you to Slides 11 through 13 of the presentation. The national load-to-truck ratio moved higher as the quarter progressed. Capacity tightened significantly in certain states during the quarter and was particularly acute in states impacted by produce season. As you can see on Slide 11, this had a direct impact on our cost of purchase transportation with buy rates moving up every month throughout the quarter. This is a long-term positive development but it does have the near-term impact of moderating gross margin and our brokerage gross margin exited the quarter at approximately 14%. Despite tightening market conditions, RXO still delivered strong brokerage gross margin of 15.4% for the quarter. We are very pleased with this margin performance at this point in freight cycle. Moving to Slide 12. We’re improving our cross-cycle profitability, delivering higher highs and higher lows. During the prior freight recession in 2019, RXO’s adjusted EBITDA declined for four quarters by approximately 70% from peak to trough. We’re now four quarters past our most recent peak but RXO’s adjusted EBITDA is approximately 3.5 times higher when compared to the second quarter of 2020. Our volume in that same period is up by 77%. Not only is our EBITDA significantly higher but our cost structure is more efficient and we’re still making improvements while simultaneously investing in the business. You can see the impact of that effort in our second quarter results. EBITDA margin was up 20 basis points sequentially despite a 5% sequential reduction in revenue. Putting this all together, we are priming our model for significant operating leverage when the market inflects and I know all of you have questions about when we think that will be. Our overall perspective is informed by internal and market data and we believe that we’re approaching the bottom of this freight cycle. National load-to-truck ratio has moved higher since our last earnings call carrier exits are continuing, albeit at a slow pace. Additionally, consumer data has been encouraging and both retail inventory positions and volumes have improved. But while these are encouraging trends, we are still operating in a soft freight market. And as Drew mentioned, the exact timing of the bottom and pace of the recovery are subject to the broader macroeconomic environment. Let’s now move to Slide 13. Our Q2 gross profit per load was roughly in line with Q1 2020, the lowest level in the last five years. Note that this was partly impacted by the growth of LTL synergy loads within our brokerage business. Importantly, since Q1 2020, our brokerage volume has grown by approximately 70%, led by our core full truckload. Expanding on this a bit more, our exit rate gross profit per load was roughly in line with Q2 2017 levels. By Q4 2017, gross profit per load had recovered by approximately 70%. While we are not calling for this type of recovery, I thought it was important to provide some historical context about how quickly the market can turn. I talked earlier about making higher lows. While we’re currently operating at similar gross profit per load when compared to Q2 2017, brokerage gross margin during the month of June was 300 basis points higher. This is a business that moves quickly and we believe that RXO has a best-in-class growth algorithm. When the environment improves, we expect a greater than 50% EBITDA contribution margin, providing a path to rapid earnings growth. I’d now like to look forward and give you some more color on what we’re expecting in the third quarter. While we don’t provide quarterly guidance, I wanted to provide some puts and takes for our brokerage business given recent market developments. We exited the quarter with incredible brokerage volume momentum. Our brokerage sales pipeline remains robust and is at its highest level since pre-COVID. The pipeline is up 118% and 132% on a two and three-year stack, respectively, despite a lower rate environment. This gives us confidence that we will again grow brokerage volume on a year-over-year basis in the third quarter. However, the third quarter will be negatively impacted by the full run rate impacts of the tighter market conditions that developed in the second quarter. Turning to monthly trends. July trends were similar to the month of June. While gross profit per load has not yet recovered, it did stabilize and was roughly flat in July when compared to June. Additionally, there were two fewer business days in the month. Encouragingly, brokerage volumes grew again on a year-over-year basis in July and truckload revenue per load trends held flat versus June. This is the first time truckload revenue per load has stabilized month-over-month since the first quarter of 2022. There are a few ways the remainder of the quarter can play out for our brokerage gross margin and I’ll summarize them for you. Let’s start with typical seasonality. While we have not yet seen gross profit per load recover, we typically see a seasonal gross profit per load improvement starting in August. To the extent this occurs, gross margin percentage for the quarter could be flat sequentially. Secondly, let’s discuss that there’s no change in the current environment. If the current environment continues with no gross profit per load recovery and only moderate capacity exits, gross margin percentage would be down slightly when compared to the second quarter of 2023. The last scenario is that there is a change in either supply or demand. If capacity starts to accelerate in a more meaningful manner, or demand increases heading into back-to-school and peak season, spot loads would emerge and increase as a percentage of the mix. While this is a long-term positive, our near-term gross margin percentage would moderate further in this scenario. To summarize, we’re continuing to gain market share profitably with brokerage gross margins that are higher than previous cycles. We’re optimizing our cost structure while strategically investing in the business and have an algorithm to deliver rapid earnings growth. We’re improving cross-cycle profitability. Our asset-light business model generates significant free cash flow and we’re returning capital to shareholders. We continue to believe that growth of free cash flow on a per share basis is a primary driver of long-term value creation. Put simply, we just grew volumes by 10% with strong gross margins as we approach the bottom of the cycle. Imagine the possibilities when the freight cycle inflects. With that, I’ll turn it over to the operator for Q&A.