Thanks, Joel. Good morning, and thanks to everyone for taking the time to listen to our second quarter earnings conference call. On our last earnings call back in April, I noted that uncertainty around tariffs and the so-called Big Beautiful Bill have created headwinds for the market. But I said then that if we got clarity on these issues, conditions could improve quickly. And that's exactly what happened. Investor sentiment improved significantly in the last 2 months of the quarter as greater clarity on tariff and tax policy emerged. The S&P 500 rallied to 1,000 points since our last call, fueling record client assets in wealth management and sparking a rebound in M&A and capital markets activity. As a result, we exited the quarter with far more momentum than we started the quarter with. If conditions hold, we're positioned for a strong second half. Our second quarter results included a very challenging April, yet we still delivered over $1.28 billion of net revenue and $1.71 in core EPS, which was the best second quarter in our history and return on tangible common equity of 22%. Our balanced model continues to deliver across market cycles. Global Wealth Management posted its strongest second quarter ever with record client asset levels and higher net interest income. Our Institutional business was resilient with a 7% year-over-year revenue increase, record fixed income revenue and a late quarter pickup in investment banking. In Global Wealth, Stifel ranked #1 overall in the J.D. Power Advisor Satisfaction Study for the third straight year and was ranked #1 in 5 of the 6 categories measured as follows: compensation, leadership and culture, operational support, products and marketing and technology. That recognition reflects our commitment to adviser support. It's not just a cultural point, it's a recruiting advantage. This was our strongest recruiting quarter since Q4 of 2015 with 82 new advisers added, including 36 through B. Riley and 21 experienced advisers representing 51 million in trailing 12-month production. Strategically, we completed our acquisition of Bryan Garnier, a European boutique investment bank with deep expertise in health care and technology. As Jim will discuss later, this acquisition supports our broader effort to reposition our European operations, deemphasizing sales and trading while expanding our focus on advisory and investment banking. Combined with the ongoing -- with ongoing efficiency initiatives, this positions Europe to contribute more meaningfully to the firm's long-term profitability. Moving on to the numbers. Our record second quarter net revenue grew 6% year-over-year, with gains across the board, except for a modest decline in advisory. Commissions and principal transactions rose 11% with gains in both Global Wealth and Institutional. With respect to investment banking, the quarter started very slowly in April, but ended strongly. Asset management revenues rose 6%, reflecting both market appreciation and improved organic growth. Net interest income was up 8% on higher interest earning assets and lower funding costs. Our compensation ratio was 58% consistent with the high end of our full year guidance as we continue to accrue compensation conservatively. Operating pretax margin was 20.3% and operating EPS of $1.71, up 7% from last year. Before I turn the call over to Jim, I'll walk through our 2 core business segments and why we're optimistic about the rest of 2025 and beyond. In Wealth Management, we continue to gain momentum, ranking #1 overall in J.D. Power isn't just a badge, it's a recognition of our foundation, which drives results. Since 2020, we've added nearly 800 financial advisers with $420 million in trailing 12- month production. Recruiting accelerated in 2025. In the first half alone, we brought in 66 experienced advisers with $63 million in production. That includes a major team from B. Riley and 30 organic recruits with $43 million in production, many in the $1 million dollar plus category. For perspective, in all of 2024, we added 50 experienced advisers with $37 million in production. These highly productive advisers bring more client assets, and those assets are increasingly fee-based, but drives more stable recurring revenue from asset management and net interest income. We ended the quarter with record total client and fee-based assets of $517 billion and $206 billion, respectively. The sequential increases were due to stronger equity markets and strong asset inflows, including the advisers from B. Riley. I'd note that our net new assets improved each month during the quarter with annualized June net new assets coming in around 5%. Looking ahead, we're confident in continued growth. While recruiting can vary from quarter-to-quarter, we expect a strong second half, with new advisers transitioning clients to our platform. Our clients continue to hold over $15 billion in money market funds and $6 billion in short-term treasuries, providing potential liquidity source for Stifel deposits. Now let me move to the Institutional Group. Total revenue for the segment was $420 million, which was up 7% from the prior year. Firm wide investment banking revenues totaled $233 million, driven by year-on-year and sequential increases in capital raising revenue. Fixed income underwriting revenue was $54 million and increased 18% sequentially driven by a solid increase in public finance activity. Stifel continues to rank #1 by the number of negotiated issues led as sole or senior managers. Equity capital raising totaled $46 million in the quarter. The market effectively shut down for 6 weeks following Liberation Day with only a handful of pipes and advisory linked deals. Activity returned mid-May alongside tariff relief, and we entered the third quarter with meaningfully stronger conditions. While industry-wide ECM fees were in line with the first half of 2024, the mix shifted. Financials and fintech were strong. Health care was down more than 50%. We're seeing early signs of broader IPO recovery and follow-on activity remains deposit driven with private equity continuing to lead issuance. As M&A paths narrow, late-stage private placement continuation vehicles and IPOs are increasingly being used to create liquidity. Advisory revenue was $127 million. We continue to get a strong -- we continue to get strong contribution from financials despite the increased volatility early in the quarter. In the second quarter, we also got solid contributions from industrials and industrial services. We are also seeing improvement in health care and technology and overall, the accelerating activity levels bode well for the second half of the year and into 2026. Now taking a step back and looking back at our acquisition of KBW now more than 10 years ago, we made a deliberate decision then to preserve the KBW brand within Stifel. That integration has been a resounding success with nearly all of the original KBW investment banking managing directors, still with KBW Stifel. The sustained focus and successful integration have helped us build a franchise with deep expertise and long-standing client trust. That commitment is now paying off. In 2025, we advised on 84% of total disclosed bank and thrift deal value, an extraordinary market share and a testament to the strength of our platform and positions us as the first call in bank M&A. Bank M&A, frankly, is accelerating and the strategic needs for larger banks to combine is also increasing. Given the improved market dynamics, we expect the trend to continue, and I'm confident in our ability to participate and lead at every level. As to our trading businesses, equity transactional revenue totaled $61 million, which was up 16% year-on-year, driven by increased market volatility. Fixed income revenue of $129 million was up 21% year-on-year with increased contributions from our rates, aircraft and municipal businesses during the quarter. Before I turn the call over to Jim, I want to briefly comment on AI, particularly the promise of agent-based models. We view AI not just as a tool for back-office automation, but as a platform to enhance how we serve clients, manage data and accelerate insights. We are systemically reviewing workflows across the firm where intelligent agents can amplify our professionals' productivity and decision-making. We've already seen early wins in areas like investment banking analytics and adviser support, examples where the right AI tools can create real leverage. That said, we're clear-eyed about the role of technology and enhances what our people do. It doesn't replace them. Our business is built on trust, relationships and judgment. AI will help us work faster and smarter, but should not replace the human side of Stifel. Now let me turn the call over to Jim to walk you through the details of our second quarter results. Jim?