Thanks, Erik, and good morning. I will now review the financial details of our second quarter and our updated guidance metrics for the third quarter and full year. For the quarter, our reported net income was $199 million, or $1.86 per diluted share, while our adjusted net income was $211 million, or $1.97 per diluted share. We delivered 3,200 home closings at an average price of $600,000, which produced total home closings revenue of $1.9 billion. Compared to our prior guidance, our closings volume benefited, primarily from more homes sold and closed during the quarter. Following this quarter's upside, we now expect to deliver between 12,600 to 12,800 homes this year, up from our prior guidance of at least 12,500 homes. This includes approximately 3,200 homes in the third quarter. At quarter end, we had 9,021 homes on our production, of which 3,368 were specs. Only 478 of these homes were finished. In addition to benefiting from enhanced construction efficiency, our starts volume continues to be highly disciplined with 3,527 homes started during the quarter or 3.4 per community per month. From a pricing perspective, we continue to expect the average closing price of our deliveries to be in the range of $600,000 to $610,000 for the full year, including approximately $600,000 in the third quarter. Our ultimate pricing will be dependent on the mix of specs sold and closed through the remainder of the year. Turning now to margins, our home closings gross margin was 23.8% on a reported basis, and 23.9% adjusted for an inventory impairment. This was similar to the 24% in the first quarter, and 24.2% a year ago as our margins have remained in a tight and healthy range, as Sheryl noted earlier, reflecting the financial resiliency provided by our diversified consumer and geographic strategy. Based on the visibility we have into our backlog of 6,256 homes, we now expect our home closings gross margin to be around 24% for both the third quarter and the full year. Beyond this year, we expect our gross margins to remain above our pre-pandemic averages, in the low-to-mid 20% range. This outlook reflects increased production and operational efficiencies, greater cost leverage from our scale and a lower capitalized interest burden from our reduced debt levels. Our net sales orders increased 3% year-over-year to 3,111 homes. This was driven by a 6% increase in ending community count to 347 outlets and a monthly absorption pace of 3 per community versus 3.1 a year ago. In the first half of the year, our monthly absorption pace averaged 3.3 per community, and as Sheryl discussed, we continue to expect to achieve our annual sales pace goal in the low three range. Cancellation rates equaled 9.4% of gross orders, which was down from 11.2% a year ago. These trends remain within normal ranges and are reflective of the strength of our diversified buyers, diligent prequalification requirements, and average ending customer deposits of $56,000 per home. SG&A as a percentage of home closings revenue was 10.2%. This was up from 9.2% a year ago, due primarily to higher payroll related and external broker expenses and a slight decline in home closings revenue. For the year, we continue to expect an SG&A ratio in the high 9% range. Beyond 2024, we are committed to continually looking for ways to optimize our SG&A, including ongoing centralization and other cost reduction efforts. Our financial services team achieved a capture rate of 89% up from 86% a year ago, as its suite of personalized incentive tools and exceptional service continue to help our buyers achieve their home ownership goals. The improved capture drove financial services revenue of $49 million with a gross margin of 42.5% up from $42 million and 39.5%, a year ago, respectively. Turning now to our strong capital position, we ended the quarter with liquidity of approximately $1.3 billion. This included $247 million of unrestricted cash and $1.1 billion of available capacity on our revolving credit facilities which remain undrawn outside normal course letters of credit. Our net home building debt-to-capitalization ratio was 22.8% and our next senior note maturity is not until 2027, providing us with financial flexibility. We expect to end the year with a net home building debt-to-capitalization in the range of 15% to 20%. Our returns-driven capital allocation priorities remain unchanged and including investing in the business, maintaining a strong liquidity position and returning excess capital to our shareholders in the form of share repurchases. During the quarter, we repurchased 1.7 million shares of our common stock outstanding for $105 million, bringing the first half total to 3.2 million shares and $196 million. This leaves us on track to meet our target of repurchasing a total of approximately $300 million of our common stock this year with an upward bias, as we remain committed to taking advantage of our strong cash generation and balance sheet strength to return excess capital to shareholders and enhance our returns. Based on our share repurchases completed and settled through the second quarter we now expect our diluted shares outstanding to average $106 million in the third quarter and $107 million in the for the full year. As is our normal practice, this guidance does not reflect the potential benefit of any future share repurchases that may occur over the remainder of the year. Now, I will turn the call back over to Sheryl.