Thanks, Greg. I'm going to highlight some of our results for the second quarter and conclude my remarks with our expectations and outlook for the third quarter and full year for 2024. As Greg mentioned, we finished the second quarter with $220.9 million of revenue on 653 closings for an average sales price on closed homes of $338,000. Our gross margin was 26.7% and SG&A was 14.4% of revenue, which includes a true-up for annual incentive bonuses that accounted for 30 basis points of the total. Pre-tax income was $25.9 million, with net income of $24.7 million for the quarter. Given the nature of our Up-C organizational structure, our reported net income reflects an effective tax rate of 4.4% on the face of our income statement. This income tax expense is primarily attributable to the income related to the 17.3% economic ownership of our public shareholders that is held by Smith Douglas Homes Corp and Smith Douglas Holdings LLC. Our adjusted net income, which is a non-GAAP measure that we believe is useful given our organizational structure is $19.4 million for the quarter and assumes a 25% blended federal and state effective tax rate as if we had 100% public ownership operating as a subchapter C corporation. We believe adjusted net income is a useful metric because it allows management and investors to evaluate our operating performance and comparability more effectively to industry peers that may have a more traditional organizational and tax structure. You can find more information about our structure and income taxes in the footnotes of our financial statements. Our net income for the quarter included a one-time charge of $1.2 million related to a purchase accounting adjustment for the true-up of the expected earnout payment related to our Devon Street acquisition that will be paid early next year. This expense is included in other expenses on our income statement. We finished the first quarter with over 15,800 total controlled lots, an increase of 81% over the second quarter of 2023, and just over 12% from the first quarter of this year. Our corporate investment committee, which meets every week to review and approve new land deals, continues to remain busy as we focus on increasing market share and driving scale throughout our existing footprint. We expect our lot supply to stay within a targeted range between 3.5 to 5.5 years of supply, calculated based on our forecasted closings over a rolling 12-month period. We finished the second quarter with 1,173 homes in backlog, with an average selling price of $345,000 and an expected gross margin on those homes of approximately 26%. We finished the quarter operating out of 75 active selling communities versus 70 at the end of the first quarter. Looking at our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with approximately $17 million of cash and no borrowings under our $250 million revolving credit facility and $344.6 million of total members and stockholders' equity. Our debt-to-book capitalization was 1.1% and our net debt to net book capitalization was negative 4.1%. We had approximately $220 million available on our unsecured credit facility and are well-positioned to execute on our growth strategy, as Greg previously mentioned. Now, I'd like to summarize our outlook for the third quarter and full year for 2024. We anticipate our third quarter home closings to finish between 725 and 775 homes at an average sales price between $340,000 and $345,000 with gross margin in the range of 26% to 26.5%. For the full year 2024, we are projecting total home closings between 2,650 and 2,800 homes, an increase of 50 closings to the low end of our prior guidance. We expect our average selling price to range between $339,000 to $343,000 and our home closing gross margin to finish between 26% to 26.75%, which is a 25 basis point increase to the low end of our prior guidance. Additionally, we continue to expect our SG&A expense ratio to be in the range of 13.75% and 14.25% for the full year, which includes approximately 420 basis points for internal and external sales commissions. We believe the primary risk to our projections are around our ability to maintain sales pace and bring our new communities and lots online. As I have mentioned on prior calls, we continue to see some delays with municipalities on permitting and flats. Macroeconomic factors, primarily around jobs, inflation and interest rates could also have unforeseen impacts to our numbers. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to the operator for instructions on Q&A.