Thank you, Mackenzie, and good morning, everyone. Joining me is Curt VanHyfte, our Chief Financial Officer; and Erik Heuser, our Chief Corporate Operations Officer. As you may have seen in this morning's earnings release, our Board of Directors has appointed Curt as our EVP and Chief Financial Officer. Curt has been serving as our interim CFO since May and has been with the company since 2020 when he joined by way of the William Lyon acquisition. He has held numerous homebuilding field and finance leadership roles throughout his nearly 30-year career, and I couldn't be more pleased to have them in the role. Now diving into our call, as usual, I will begin with our quarterly highlights and update on the market and our strategic priorities. After my remarks, Erik will discuss our strong land portfolio and investment strategy while Curt will review our financial results and guidance metrics. Our second quarter results once again outperformed our expectations across all key metrics as we continue to realize the benefits of our scale, streamlined operations and balanced portfolio, along with improved market conditions. Among the highlights, we delivered 3,125 homes at a home closings gross margin of 24.2% and an SG&A ratio of 9.2%, resulting in diluted earnings per share of $2.12. Coupled with nearly $400 million in share repurchases over the last 18 months, this performance drove a 30% year-over-year increase in our book value per share to almost $46 and a return on equity of 22%. Our focus on the operational efficiencies that generated these earnings has been equally matched by our balance sheet stewardship. As a result, we have never been in a stronger position to support future growth as we ended the quarter with an all-time high liquidity position of $2.3 billion and a homebuilding net debt to capital ratio of just 15.4% which was down 2100 basis points from a year ago. On the demand front, sales and shopper activity remained healthy throughout the quarter, maintaining the momentum that began in the early spring selling season. In total, our net sales orders increased 6% sequentially and 18% year-over-year, driven by a monthly absorption pace of 3.1 per community as compared to 2.9 in the first quarter and 2.6 a year ago. It's worth noting that one of the many ways in which we are driving a more efficient, faster turning businesses by targeting an annualized absorption rate in the low 3 range as compared to our historical low to mid-2s. This increase reflects the intentional shift in our community mix and geographic footprint in recent years. At the same time, we have increased the average size of our newly underwritten communities by approximately 50% over the same period, which will also improve our sales velocity and cost leverage as we drive enhanced long-term returns on our invested capital. When I look across our portfolio, sales momentum was evident once again across nearly all our markets. Strength was most pronounced in our West region, led by Sacramento, Seattle and Phoenix. Our Central region also improved meaningfully, most notably in Dallas and Houston, which was encouraging given its slower start to the year. And lastly, in the East, nearly all our markets continue to see healthy trends with Raleigh and Charlotte standing out most positively. By Consumer Group, our second quarter net sales orders were comprised of our move-up category at 39%, our entry-level segment at 33% and our resort lifestyle communities at 28%. Compared to a year ago, our entry level and resort lifestyle sales have recovered strongly, while our core move-up segment has remained the most stable in recent quarters at healthy paces. Alongside the improvement in demand, we raised pricing or reduced incentives sequentially in the majority of our communities during the second quarter. These pricing adjustments have generally been modest as we continue to balance affordability with pricing power on a community-by-community basis. Most importantly, this renewed stability has reinforced shopper sense of urgency and further solidified the value of our backlog, which is also secured by average deposits of $62,000 or just over 9% per home, while also partially offsetting any cost pressures. Thus far in July, activity has been consistent with seasonal norms while leading indicators, including web and foot traffic, mortgage prequalifications and digital home reservations are stable at healthy levels. On the latter, it's worth sharing that our online home reservation systems contributed 16% of our second quarter gross sales with an all-time outsized conversion rate of 47%. Since the Federal Reserve began its aggressive fight against inflation a little over one year ago, an equilibrium has emerged where consumers have reset their expectations and our industry has recalibrated its pricing, incentives and product offerings to align with today's higher interest rate environment. At the same time, consumers have been met with a historic lack of for-sale inventory in the existing home market, where approximately 2/3 of homeowners hold interest rates below 4%. This has driven meaningful share gains for new construction, with the percentage of new home listings more than doubling from long-term norms to over 30% of the market. Further compounding these dynamics, our research indicates that homebuyers are increasingly preferring new construction to existing homes for ease of living, customization or cultural preferences. While affordability remains top of mind and a true challenge for some consumers, especially those in the most entry-level price points who require more support to achieve manageable monthly payment, the lack of inventory, coupled with underlying demographic strength have supported resilient demand for new homes. At Taylor Morrison, we are well positioned to continue to serve that need across our balanced portfolio of entry level, move-up and resort lifestyle communities. In each of those segments, we primarily invest in well-located prime core submarkets where performance has proven to be the most durable throughout housing cycles as has been the case over the last 18 months, as pricing pressures were felt most acutely in noncore areas where we have little exposure. In addition, this strategy allows us to attract a relatively well qualified consumer even among our first-time homebuyers who are generally better equipped to carry higher housing costs if needed. For example, of our buyers financed by Taylor Morrison Home funding in the second quarter, 41% were first-time buyers. And by age group, 51% were millennials and another 4% were Gen