Thanks, Troy. Turning to Page 10, sales in the second quarter were $237.1 million, which was relatively in line with the prior quarter. Adjusted operating income was $5.4 million or 2.3% of sales, which resulted in a 210-basis-point improvement in adjusted operating margin and a $5 million improvement in operating profit relative to the first quarter of this year on similar sales. Adjusted EPS was $0.17 in the second quarter, a $0.39 improvement versus the first quarter. As Jim mentioned earlier on the call, our second quarter performance was driven by our continued focus on improving the fundamentals of our business, leading to significantly improved margins. Our continued focus on material cost improvement actions, reduced quality-related costs and control of our operating expenses significantly benefited our performance in the quarter. The below-the-line impact of foreign currency favorably impacted the second quarter results by $2.3 million. This was driven primarily by overall favorable FX rates, as well as the capitalization of certain intercompany loans in the second quarter, taking advantage of those rates to offset the headwinds we saw in the first quarter and reduce the potential for future volatility. Finally, on similar sales, EBITDA improved by $9.5 million from quarter-to-quarter, with EBITDA margin improvement of 410 basis points. Page 11 summarizes our key financial metrics specific to Control Devices. Control Devices’ second quarter sales of $80.9 million increased by approximately $2.9 million or 3.7% versus the first quarter, primarily driven by higher sales in the North American passenger vehicle and market, as well as higher China commercial vehicle sales. Sales into electric vehicle platforms also moderately improved relative to the first quarter. Second quarter operating margin of 4.6% increased by 180 basis points compared to the first quarter of 2024, primarily due to benefits recognized from completed negotiations related to price and low-volume claims, improved operational execution, and continued operating cost control. As discussed on previous calls, we remain focused on drive-training agnostic technologies to drive new business awards as the market evolves. We continue to focus on operational excellence and enterprise-wide cost reduction, including material cost reduction plans to continue to drive margin improvement going forward. Page 12 summarizes our key financial metrics specific to Electronics. Excluding the unfavorable impact of foreign currency, Electronics’ second quarter sales of just under $156 million were approximately in line with the first quarter of the year. Lower sales in the European commercial vehicle end market, primarily as a result of continued macroeconomic pressure, were offset by higher sales in the European off-highway and North American commercial vehicle end markets. Second quarter adjusted operating margin expanded by approximately 310 basis points compared to the first quarter, primarily due to material cost improvements, lower quality-related cost and lower engineering expenses due in part to higher customer reimbursements during the quarter. On relatively flat sales, we generated an incremental $4.6 million of operating income in the quarter. Building upon the operational excellence initiatives we are already executing, we expect to further benefit from recent actions taken to improve our engineering organization through the rebalancing of our footprint to improve our capacity and our capabilities, as well as reduce our total costs. Electronics remains well-positioned to take advantage of significant future growth and margin expansion as a result of a strong product portfolio, a substantial backlog of awarded programs, continued improvement in material costs and organizational optimization. Page 13 summarizes our key financial metrics specific to Stoneridge Brazil. Excluding the unfavorable impact of foreign currency of approximately $600,000, Stoneridge Brazil’s second quarter sales improved by 2% versus the first quarter. Again, excluding the unfavorable impact of foreign currency of approximately $200,000 on operating income, second quarter operating profit was in line with the first quarter of the year. We continue to shift our portfolio in Brazil to more closely align with our global growth initiatives and further expand our local OEM programs to support our global customers. Brazil has become a critical engineering center as we continue to align our global engineering capabilities and footprint. We will continue to utilize our global footprint to cost-effectively support our global business. Turning to Slide 14, we are updating our full year 2024 guidance to reflect updated foreign currency rates, updated OEM production volumes and current expectations for non-OEM and customer demand-based products, including aftermarket and option-selectable products. Unfavorable foreign currency is expected to impact our guidance by approximately $12 million. That said, we do not expect the impact of foreign currency on sales to impact earnings materially as cost in local currency also declined to generally offset the revenue decline. Based on current forecasts, we expect a reduction in OEM production volumes related to lower production volumes for commercial vehicle programs in both Europe and North America, driven primarily by continued macroeconomic pressures, as well as reduced demand in North America passenger vehicle programs. The forecasted reduction in OEM volumes is expected to reduce full-year revenue by approximately $18 million. In addition, we are seeing increased pressure and some timing delays on non-OEM and customer demand-based products, including the timing of adoption for certain MirrorEye retrofit applications, the market adoption of the SMART2 tachograph and increased headwinds in our off-highway end markets. Finally, as Jim mentioned previously, while current orders for the Volvo MirrorEye system are less than initially expected, communication from Volvo has suggested volumes relatively in line with our original expectations for the full year. The high end of our guidance assumes a nominal impact based on these factors, while the midpoint considers approximately $15 million of revenue headwinds from non-OEM and customer demand-based products. We continue to put actions in place to influence the revenue that we have some control over for the remainder of the year. For example, we continue to see significant opportunity in the SMART2 tachograph after market, and are working closely with our distributors to maximize market penetration. As a result, we are expecting midpoint revenue of approximately $955 million for the full year, with a range of $940 million to $970 million, based on the potential for volatility in our non-OEM and customer demand-based products for the remainder of the year. As has been the case historically, we are expecting reduced revenue in the third quarter relative to the second quarter due to summer shutdowns and seasonality in production. We are expecting fourth quarter revenue to continue to improve according to normal seasonality, with the potential for outperformance based on continued OEM MirrorEye acceleration and tachograph aftermarket sales. As a result of the reduced revenue, we would typically expect decremental margins aligned with our historical rates of approximately 25% to 30%. Excluding the impact of foreign currency, as I discussed earlier, the $33 million total reduction between OEM and non-OEM products at the midpoint would result in EBITDA reduction of approximately $9 million for the year. However, similar to our outperformance in the second quarter, we are expecting continued core performance initiatives to improve our earnings as the year continues and to limit the impact of reduced revenue expectations. We expect these activities will improve earnings by approximately $3 million for the remainder of the year, resulting in a decremental contribution margin of approximately 18%, excluding the impact of foreign currency, and only 13%, including the impact of FX. We continue to significantly outpace our underlying end markets, creating a runway for sustainable long-term growth. Similarly, we continue to improve the fundamental performance of the business, resulting in some mitigation of the expected revenue decline this year, and more importantly, continuing to build a foundation for strong incremental earnings as we grow next year and beyond. Page 15 outlines our full year guidance we outlined on the prior page. As we have discussed throughout the call, our base performance is improving as we continue to execute on the key priorities we outlined for the year. As a result, despite reduced revenue expectations, we are increasing our gross margin midpoint guidance by 50 basis points to reflect our expectations of continued improvements in material costs and manufacturing performance. Aligned with current market conditions, we are reducing our adjusted operating margin and adjusted EBITDA margin expectations to reflect reduced leverage on lower sales. Finally, we are reducing our midpoint adjusted EPS guidance for the full year by $0.12 to a midpoint of $0.23 to reflect reduced fixed cost leverage on reduced sales and an updated tax expense expectation of $5 million to $6 million based on our current expectation of earnings by jurisdiction. We continue to focus on improving the variables that are in our control and acting swiftly to mitigate factors that may be outside of our control, including continued macroeconomic pressures in our end markets and currency volatility. Our second quarter results and our expectations of improved gross margin for the remainder of the year are proof that our actions are improving our run rate as we progress toward our long-term targets. With that, I will turn it back over to Jim for some closing comments.