Thanks, Doug. And congrats on today being the 35th anniversary of your first day at Toll and your 60th conference call. We had a strong second quarter, beating our guidance for deliveries, homebuilding revenue, adjusted gross margin, SG&A and earnings. In the quarter, we delivered 2,899 homes and generated home sales revenues of $2.71 billion, up nearly 10% units and 2.3% in dollars compared to last year. Both were second quarter records. At the midpoint, we delivered nearly 300 more homes in our guidance or $236 million of home sales revenue. The average price of homes delivered in the quarter was approximately $934,000, a bit below the low end of our guidance as we delivered more homes in our Mountain and Mid-Atlantic regions than anticipated. We signed 2,650 net agreements for $2.6 billion in the quarter, down 13% in units and 11% in dollars compared to the second quarter of fiscal year 2024. The average price of contracts signed in the quarter was approximately $983,000, up 1.6% compared to last year. At second quarter end, our backlog still stood at $6.84 billion and 6,063 homes, down 7% in dollars and 15% units compared to a year ago. The average price of the homes in our backlog was $113 million, a company record. Our second quarter adjusted gross margin was 27.5% and which was 25 basis points better than guidance. Our Q2 gross margin exceeded guidance primarily due to positive mix, strong cost control and increased leverage from higher-than-projected revenues. Write-offs in our home sales gross margin totaled $9.8 million in the quarter, as compared to $28.4 million in the second quarter of 2024. SG&A as a percentage of home sales revenue was 9.5% in the second quarter and 80 basis points better than guidance. Again, reflecting our focus on cost controls and leverage from higher-than-expected home sales revenue. Second quarter JV land sales and other income was $29 million versus our breakeven guidance. Approximately $15 million of this gain was attributable to the sale of a stabilized asset in one of our Apartment Living joint ventures, with the remainder primarily attributable to interest income and income from our mortgage title and City Living operations. Our tax rate in the second quarter was approximately 26.2%. Our balance sheet is very healthy. At second quarter end, we had $2.8 billion of liquidity, including approximately $686 million of cash, and our net debt-to-capital ratio was 19.8%. In addition, we are generating strong cash flows with approximately $1 billion of cash flows from operations projected for fiscal 2025. As previously reported, during the quarter, we extended the maturities of our credit facilities to February 2030 and upsized our revolver to $2.35 billion and we increased our quarterly dividend by 9% to $0.25 per share. We repurchased $177 million of our common stock, bringing full year repurchases to approximately $200 million and we bought 2,073 lots for $362 million. As Doug mentioned, as a result of our strong financial position and healthy cash flows, we are increasing our projected share repurchases in fiscal '25 from $500 million to $600 million. Turning to guidance. Our outlook is subject to the usual caveats regarding forward-looking information and the assumptions, risks and uncertainties inherent to projections. Based on our backlog, recent sales activity and the number of homes currently under construction or completed, we expect to deliver between 2,800 and 3,000 homes in the third quarter. and we continue to expect to deliver between 11,200 and 11,600 homes for the full year. Our projected second half delivery cadence is consistent with what it has been over the past several years. On average, we delivered approximately 58% of full year deliveries in the second half with 26% of the total delivered in the third quarter and 32% in the fourth quarter. We are projecting essentially the same percentages this year. The average price of deliveries in the third quarter is expected to be between $965,000 and $985,000. We are maintaining our full year projection of $945,000 to $965,000 for our average price of deliveries. As Doug mentioned, in today's softer demand environment we believe it makes the most strategic sense to prioritize price and margin over pace. This strategy, combined with the gross margin embedded in our backlog, gives us confidence in maintaining our full year projected adjusted gross margin of 27.5%. For the third quarter, we also expect adjusted gross margin to be 27.25%. We expect interest in cost of sales to be approximately 1.2% of home sales revenues in the third quarter and also for the full year. Third quarter SG&A as a percentage of home sales revenue is expected to be approximately 9.2%. For the full year, we continue to expect it to be between 9.4% and 9.5%. Other income, income from unconsolidated entities and land sales gross profit in the third quarter is expected to break even. We continue to project $110 million for the full year much of which is projected to come from fourth quarter sales of our interest in certain stabilized department communities developed by Toll Brothers Apartment Living in joint venture with various partners. We project the third quarter tax rate to be approximately 26% and the full year rate to be approximately 25.5%. Our community count at quarter end was $421 compared to our guide of $4.15. We expect 430 at the end of the third quarter and reaffirm 440 to 450 communities by the end of the fiscal year. Our weighted average share count is expected to be approximately 99 million for the third quarter and 100 million for the full year. This assumes we repurchased $400 million of common stock in the second half on top of the $200 million we bought back so far this year, which would be consistent with the greater operating cash flow we typically generate in the second half. All of our guidance for fiscal 2025 translates to approximately $14 per diluted share. This would result in a full year return of being return on beginning equity of approximately 18%, and we put our year-end book value per share at approximately $90. We believe these results will once again reinforce the strength and resiliency of our business model as well as our ability to successfully navigate changing market conditions while still delivering attractive returns to stockholders. Now let me turn it back to Doug.