Thanks, Joe. Yesterday, we reported first quarter earnings of $195 million compared to $257 million for the same quarter last year. That equates to $1 per nonvoting share this quarter and $1.31 per nonvoting share for the first quarter of last year. Nearly 60% of the decline came from the decrease in gains on the disposal of retired equipment. During the remainder of my prepared remarks, all of my comparisons are going to be for the first quarter of fiscal '25 versus the first quarter of fiscal '24. Equipment rental revenue results, we had a $15 million increase. That's about 1.5%. This is our first year-over-year increase in equipment rental revenue in eight quarters, and is 35% higher than the first quarter of fiscal 2020, which was our last quarter before the pandemic. And I mentioned this because it puts our current first quarter results above where our historical trend would have had us absent the positive business side effects of the pandemic. Transactions and revenue per transaction in both our in-town and one-way markets improved. The increase in transactions, combined with the progress that we've made in rotating older equipment out of the fleet resulted in an increase in equipment utilization. July revenue results were close to even with last year's monthly result, we've had a good start here in the first week of August. Capital expenditures for new rental equipment were $539 million, that's an $85 million increase. We've increased our fiscal 2025 full-year net CapEx projection by about $40 million to $90 million [ph]. That's due to the addition of more units that became available from one of our manufacturers. On the other side of the equation, proceeds from the sales of retired equipment decreased by $49 million to a total of $144 million. That's a combination of fewer sales of our smaller trucks and vans along with a lower sales proceeds per unit that we received for each of those trucks. Switching gears to self-storage, we were up $17 million, which is about 8%, average revenue per occupied foot continued to improve across the entire portfolio up nearly 3%. And if you carve out the same-store portfolio, we were up just over 4.5% per foot. Our occupied unit count at the end of June was up over 32,000 units compared to the same time last year. But as Joe alluded to, during the same time frame, we added nearly 64,000 new units that this differential then led to our average occupancy across the entire portfolio to decline about 280 basis points to 80%. If you split out the same-store portfolio, we saw average occupancy come down by 120 basis points to 93.9%. And since June of last year, we grew our same-store portfolio by 59 locations. During the quarter, we invested $402 million in real estate acquisitions along with self-storage and U-Box warehouse development costs. That was a $108 million increase. During the quarter, we added 17 new storage locations, along with expansion projects at several locations. The total square footage increase was just under 1.7 million new net rentable square feet. We currently have about 7,700,000 new square feet being developed across 158 active projects as an another 9.2 million square feet of development pending behind that. Our U-Box revenue results are included in other revenue in our 10-Q filings, this line item increased $9 million, of which U-Box was a major contributor. Earnings before interest, taxes and depreciation at our Moving and Storage segment, adjusted to remove interest income from the prior year, and I'll touch on that a little bit more here in a second, increased by $16.5 million. Few comments on operating expenses at the Moving and Storage segment, they increased $21.5 million, leaving our operating margin before depreciation and lease expense flat with the first quarter of '24. On a positive note, we saw fleet repair and maintenance decreased a little over $20 million, a pace is -- that we're unlikely to maintain throughout the rest of this year. On the other side, personnel costs were up a little over $11 million, liability costs associated with the fleet were up $13 million and then property taxes and building maintenance were up a combined $10 million. We continue to place a premium on having access to cash at the end of June at our moving and storage segment, our cash, along with availability, unused availability from existing facilities totaled $1.567 billion. We saw interest during the quarter increased $6.6 million while interest income on our cash and short-term investments decreased just under $9 million due to less cash being held on the balance sheet. For this year, there's going to be a bit of a presentation difference on the moving and storage interest income. It's going to take a little bit of extra effort to make the appropriate comparison. If you have any questions about that, please feel free to reach out to Sebastien and myself to walk you through it. On our Investor Relations website, investors.uhaul.com, we posted some supplemental materials this quarter that are in addition to our press release and our 10-Q filing, you can click on these on the home page and also on the lower right-hand corner of that page. With that, I would like to hand the call back to Angela, our operator, to begin the question-and-answer portion of the call.