Thanks, John. Today, I'm going to review our second quarter results, our balance sheet and liquidity position and our outlook for the rest of the year. Starting with our Vacation Ownership segment. Contract sales declined 1% in the quarter on a year-over-year basis with a 5% increase in tourist being offset by VPG and sales grew 3% year-over-year, excluding Maui. As I mentioned during our last call, we needed the improvements in delinquencies that we saw in March and April to continue, which did not happen. While delinquencies were flat to the first quarter, they were 120 basis points above 2023 levels, driving the need to increase the reserve on the balance sheet by $70 million. Under timeshare accounting rules, we booked a $13 million offset in cost of vacation ownership products, so the net impact to adjusted EBITDA was $57 million. We also expect our sales reserve to be 11% to 12% of contract sales for the balance of the year, several hundred basis points above our historical norms, where I expect we will remain until we see loan performance improve. As John mentioned, we believe lower inflation and a more normalized maintenance fee increase for 2025 will improve our portfolio performance in the future. Development margin declined year-over-year, excluding the increased reserve, due primarily to lower VPGs and higher marketing and sales costs, partially offset by lower product cost. Excluding the increase in our sales reserve, our development margin would have been 27% in the quarter. Rental profit in our Vacation Ownership segment increased $11 million year-over-year, driven by higher rental revenue and $8 million of incremental costs allocated to marketing and sales expense. Finally, as expected, financing profit declined 10% year-over-year, driven by higher interest expense, partially offset by increased financing revenue, while resort management profit increased 9%. As a result, adjusted EBITDA in our Vacation Ownership segment declined 26% year-over-year. Moving to our Exchange & Third-Party Management segment. Adjusted EBITDA declined $7 million compared to the prior year, driven by lower exchanges in Interval and decreased profit at Aqua Aston due to softness in Maui. As a result, total company adjusted EBITDA declined 29% year-over-year and would have been roughly in line with our expectations and consensus EBITDA for the quarter, excluding the increase in our sales reserve. Moving to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with net debt to adjusted EBITDA of 4.4 times and $820 million in liquidity. We also have nearly $1 billion of inventory on our balance sheet, including inventory reported in property and equipment, enough to support more than two years of future sales. Moving to guidance. With the first half behind us, we are lowering our full year adjusted EBITDA guidance range to between $685 million and $715 million. We now expect contract sales to grow 1% to 3% for the year, reflecting second quarter results and our updated second half forecast of 3% to 7% growth. We expect second half tours to grow 12% year-over-year at the midpoint, with VPG declining 7%, 3 points of the tour growth is expected to come from lapping Maui this month. Asia Pacific, which will benefit from the reopening of our second Bali sales center is expected to drive another four points of the growth. Our packaged pipeline is expected to drive another 2 to 3 points of tour growth the second half of the year, while the opening of Waikiki will drive another point. Excluding Maui, we expect year-over-year contract sales growth in the second half of the year to be approximately 3% at the midpoint of our revised guidance range, consistent with our first half performance. We now expect development margin to be around 22% for the year, including a 3-point impact from the additional reserve. Our VO rental business had a very strong first half, and transient keys on the books for the second half are up 4% compared to last year. As a result, we now think rental profit could increase by more than $30 million for the year. We also think resort management profit growth in the second half of the year will be consistent with the first half. In our Exchange & Third-Party Management business, we expect Interval members to be down a few points for the year and average revenue per member to be largely unchanged. As a result, we expect adjusted EBITDA to decline in the $11 million to $13 million range in the second half of the year, with roughly half of that coming from Aqua Aston due to Maui. Finally, G&A is expected to be down $8 million to $10 million year-over-year in the second half driven by our cost savings initiatives. Moving to cash flow. We now estimate that our adjusted free cash flow will be in the $300 million to $340 million range this year, reflecting our updated adjusted EBITDA guidance. Included in this guidance is $10 million of lower inventory spending. Our plan is to deploy our free cash to repay some of our corporate debt as well as return cash to shareholders through dividends and buybacks while our goal remains to get our leverage back to 3 times by the end of 2025. With that, we'll be happy to answer your questions. Paul?