Thanks Jamie and good morning everyone. We continued to outperform the market in the second quarter, growing brokerage volume by 4% year-over-year. LTL growth was robust with 40% year-over-year growth, exceeding our guidance of 30%. Our full truckload customers continue to award us LTL freight because of our strong service and relationships. LTL represented 20% of brokerage volume in the second quarter, up 300 basis points sequentially and 500 basis points year-over-year. Full truckload volume was down 2% year-over-year, above the midpoint of the range we provided last quarter. Full truckload volume represented 80% of brokerage volume in the quarter, down 300 basis points sequentially and down 500 basis points year-over-year. We also maintained a favorable mix of contract and spot business in the quarter. With LTL growing so quickly and considering that a vast majority of our LTL freight is contractual in nature, starting this quarter and going forward, we'll communicate our spot and contract mix from a full truckload perspective. We believe this is a more accurate representation of our underlying volume mix. Contracts represented 78% of our full truckload volume in the quarter, approximately flat sequentially and up 300 basis points when compared to the second quarter of 2023. In the second quarter, overall contract volume grew 9% year-over-year and full truckload contract volume was up 2% year-over-year. Importantly, on a three-year stack, our full truckload contract volume grew by over 40% which speaks to our multi-year market share gains. Within our full truckload business, performance across our major verticals was largely consistent with our consolidated volume trends. Retail and e-commerce volume was approximately flat year-over-year. Inventory positions at our retail customers were made healthy. At the largest retailers in the country, year-over-year revenue growth has exceeded inventory growth for the last six consecutive quarters. While this is encouraging, consumer confidence continues to fall with many leading indicators sitting at multi-month lows. Volume from industrial and manufacturing customers was also approximately flat year over year. While there were some encouraging signs earlier in the year with the ISM manufacturing PMI, the new orders component has been in contractionary territory for the last few months. Automotive volume grew by 14% year-over-year although at a slower pace than the last few quarters. From a profitability perspective, brokerage gross margin of 14.7% was toward the high end of the 13% to 15% range we provided you in May. As expected, brokerage gross margin and gross profit per load moved lower as the quarter progressed due to seasonality. I'll expand on this momentarily. In the second quarter, we launched several new technology enhancements. We strengthened tracking and visibility for cross-border customers and rolled out enhanced AI pricing algorithms. We continued to expand our LTL automation capabilities and rolled out LTL enhancements to drive improved billing accuracy and time to bill. Seven-day carrier retention remains strong at 75% in the quarter, down slightly from 76% in the first quarter. Our technology enables our people to become even more productive. On a rolling 12-month basis, productivity in our brokerage business as measured by loads per person per day improved by over 18% year-over-year. I now like to review our brokerage financial performance and market conditions in more detail. You can find this information on slides 10 through 13 of the presentation. Revenue per load declined by 7% year-over-year, the 4th fourth consecutive quarter of easing. That's an 800 basis point improvement when compared to the first quarter. To get a better sense of our consolidated year-over-year price declines on a per load basis, it's important to consider the impacts of length of haul, mix and changes in fuel prices. When normalizing for those items, revenue per load on a percentage basis was down just low single digits year-over-year, also moderating when compared to last quarter's year-over-year decline. While we have lapped the length of haul headwinds, we expect mix to be a continued headwind given our robust LTL volume growth. As a reminder, LTL revenue per load is dilutive to consolidated revenue per load, but at scale LTL runs at higher gross margin and EBITDA margin percentage when compared to full truckload. Full truckload revenue per load inflected positive year-over-year in the month of June, slightly ahead of our expectation of roughly flat year-over-year. Let's move to slide 11 and discuss RXO Brokerage monthly gross margin and industry trends. We entered the second quarter with a gross margin of approximately 16%. As expected, the market tightened as the quarter progressed due to seasonal factors, most notably produce season and DOT road check. Thanks to our bid season strategy and our ability to leverage technology to effectively procure capacity, we were still able to post a gross margin toward the high end of guidance despite tightening market conditions. From an industry perspective, we're still operating in a prolonged soft freight environment but there are some encouraging signs. The national load-to-truck ratio and tender rejections moved higher both sequentially and year-over-year in the second quarter, averaging approximately 4.2% and 4.5% respectively. However, the national average was heavily influenced by pockets of regional tightness due to produce season. On the demand side, while it has not yet translated into over the road volume strength, year-to-date port volume growth has been robust. This is also consistent with the improved inventory positions of our retail customers. However, as I mentioned earlier, we are monitoring the macroeconomic indicators that have recently weakened. Turning to supply, there is still too much truckload capacity relative to current demand and carrier unit economics remain challenged. However, there have been monthly carrier authority exits for almost two years and with the reduced supply, the environment is likely now more susceptible to being impacted by near-term changes in demand. While it's too early to determine if this is the beginning of the recovery, industry metrics are moving in the right direction. Let's go to slide 12. With our LTL brokerage volume growing so rapidly, we thought it would be helpful to break out our historical full truckload and LTL volume gross profit per load trends. As we just walked through, our profitability moved lower as the quarter progressed due to seasonal factors, but full truckload gross profit per load in the second quarter improved modestly when compared to the first quarter. RXO's full truckload gross profit per load remains at trough levels. To give some more color, in the second quarter, RXO's full truckload gross profit per load was approximately 30% below our five-year average. When the cycle recovers, there will be strong flow through to adjusted EBITDA. Moving to slide 13, our LTL business has grown rapidly over the past few years. Importantly, LTL brokerage operates with less cyclical gross profit per load. At scale, LTL will be a key contributor of stable EBITDA. I now like to look forward and give you some more color on our third quarter outlook. This outlook assumes no meaningful improvement in freight market conditions and limited spot opportunities. Let's start with brokerage. We expect consolidated brokerage volume to decline by low to mid-single digit percent year over year in the third quarter and to increase slightly sequentially. We expect LTL volume to grow again in the third quarter, the business is performing well as we scale and we expect LTL volume to increase by 10% to 20% year-over-year. Turning to full truckload, we expect full truckload volume to decline by a high single-digit to low double-digit percent year-over-year, primarily due to our bid season strategy and more difficult comps. On a sequential basis, we expect full truckload volume to be approximately flat when compared to the second quarter. I want to expand on our historical volume growth. We grew volume by 12% in 2023, significantly outperforming the broader market which declined by mid-single digits. As we mentioned last quarter, our comps get tougher as the year progresses and we expect this dynamic to be most pronounced in the fourth quarter of this year. A high single digit to low double digit percent year-over-year decline in third quarter full truckload volume would still result in full truckload contract volume growth of approximately 30% on a three-year stack, significantly ahead of the broader market. Moving to revenue per load, we expect consolidated year –over-year revenue per load declines to improve again in the third quarter marking the fifth consecutive quarter of moderating declines. We expect full truckload revenue per load to be approximately flat year over year in the third quarter. We expect brokerage gross margin to be between 13% and 15% in the third quarter, similar to our outlook for the second quarter despite tightening freight market conditions. We expect brokerage gross margin percentage and gross profit per load to seasonally improve throughout the third quarter with July representing the low point of the quarter. Turning to Complimentary Services, in Managed Transportation we expect automotive volume to improve throughout the quarter as plants come back online and in last mile, while we're expecting a seasonal decline from the second quarter, this will be largely offset by the profitability initiative that Jamie described earlier. We also continue to remain disciplined on costs and the third quarter will benefit from the full run rate of our cost take outs. Putting it all together, we expect RXO's third quarter adjusted EBITDA to grow again sequentially and be between $28 million and $34 million. In summary, we're continuing to execute well in this soft freight market. We're entering third quarter with continued momentum, sustained multi-year brokerage market share gains, a managed transportation pipeline of greater than $1.6 billion and tangible progress on improving last mile profitability. We expect to deliver strong earnings growth when the market influx and look forward to closing the acquisition of Coyote in the first half of the fourth quarter. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator for Q&A.