Thanks, Mark, and good morning, everyone. I'll start-off with a summary of our consolidated results for the quarter on slide five. For the second quarter, we reported $696 million in total sales for a core decline of approximately 3%. As Mark noted, sales were impacted by order timing at our environmental and fueling solutions segment and our alternative energy business, as well as lower discretionary spend impacting repair solutions. Book-to-bill was above one in all three of our segments, with each reporting low-single-digit order growth year-over-year. Adjusted operating profit margin declined by approximately 60 basis points year-over-year, as contributions from positive price/cost and productivity were more than offset by lower volume. This resulted in adjusted EPS of $0.63 for the quarter. Adjusted free cash flow was $26 million, reflecting higher inventory due to the shipment delays and unfavorable linearity of revenue. Turning to our segment results, starting on slide six. Environmental and fueling solutions core sales declined 5% year-over-year. Shipment delays negatively impacted sales by approximately $30 million, with over half recovered in July. Dispenser sales declined compared to the prior year. Large convenience store operators are prioritizing new-build projects, which have longer construction cycles. Some of this is at the expense of shorter-term refresh and retrofit projects, which is temporarily impacting volume growth, both in the quarter and second-half of the year. Aftermarket parts sales increased high-teens in the quarter. We continue to leverage a large and expanding installed base and focus on high-value components, accelerating growth in this high-margin offering. Sales of environmental solutions also grew during the quarter, with low-double-digit order growth benefiting from global regulatory tailwinds. Segment operating profit margins expanded 60 basis points, as we were able to offset lower volumes with positive price/cost, strong supply chain management and operational productivity. Turning to slide seven. Mobility technologies core sales increased 1% in the quarter, driven by strong demand for payment and enterprise productivity solutions in the convenience retail market, offset by ongoing weakness in our car wash business. Invenco delivered another strong quarter, reporting low-double-digit sales growth. Orders were up nearly 20% for the second consecutive quarter. Sales for alternative energy solutions declined mid-single-digits, as $6 million of shipments pushed from June and was recovered in July. Demand for our compressed and renewable natural gas solutions remains robust, with orders up 20% in Q2. We expect this business to return to mid-teens growth in the second-half and deliver low-double-digit growth for the full-year. Sales at our car wash technologies business, DRB declined mid-teens in the quarter, largely as anticipated, driven by continued lower demand in our point of sale and control systems tied to new tunnel car wash sites. This was partially offset by low-double-digit growth in recurring revenue, led by strength in service and aftermarket. Our DRB project pipeline continues to push to the right, given prolonged higher interest rates. Notably, our backlog for 2025 continues to build, exceeding our level for the back half of this year. Segment operating profit margin was down approximately 140 basis points versus the prior year, due primarily to unfavorable mix and ongoing R&D investments at Invenco. Finally, on slide eight, repair solutions core sales declined 5% in the quarter. There was a meaningful pullback in service tax discretionary spend in the month of June. As an example, tool storage sales declined just over 25% in the month. Sales within diagnostics were up low-single-digits, which is a testament to our new product vitality with last year's Max 5 launch continuing to capture market share. Segment operating profit margin declined approximately 500 basis points, driven by lower volumes as well as the timing of bad debt reserves year-over-year. Looking at our balance sheet and capital deployment on slide nine. During the quarter, we retired our 2024 maturity and ended the quarter with a net debt ratio of 2.7 times, in line with our target of 2.5 times to 3 times. We also completed approximately $38 million in share repurchases in the quarter and $60 million year-to-date. Our balance sheet is healthy with strong liquidity with over $300 million in cash on hand and an undrawn credit revolver. We continue to believe there is a significant valuation disconnect relative to our long-term growth, profitability and cash generation potential. In the second-half, we expect to deploy a significant amount of the free cash flow we generate to buybacks, including our near-term intent to enter into a $100 million accelerated share repurchase program. With that, let me provide an update on our thinking for the third quarter and full-year. I'm on slide 10. We expect the macro-environment to remain challenged near term amid continued uncertainty and consumer weakness with higher rates and U.S. elections continuing to delay customer order decisions and discretionary spending. We anticipate top line performance to remain pressured under this scenario, and now expect Q3 core growth to be in the range of minus 2% to plus 2% with margin down 80 basis points to 110 basis points equating to EPS in the range of $0.67 to $0.71. For the full-year, we expect revenue in the range of $2.9 billion to $3 billion, which reflects a 1% core decline on the low-end and approximately 3% growth on the high-end. With more of our incremental cost actions to benefit the fourth quarter, we anticipate operating margin flat with the prior year to up 50 basis points. EPS would be in the range of $2.80 to $3.00. Recognizing this is below our prior guidance and with a wider range, we believe our current outlook reflects an appropriate level of conservativeness based on what we are seeing and hearing from customers and channel partners. We thought it would be helpful to provide more transparency into the moving pieces of the top line guide. We've included slide 11 to help bridge you from the prior sales guidance midpoint to our updated 2024 midpoint of $2.95 billion. Operationally, we're lowering our second-half outlook by $110 million, which we break down for you by segment on the slide. Turning to slide 12, we've bridged our EPS guidance in a similar manner. Dropping through the $120 million reduction in revenue at a standard gross margin equates to an EPS decline of around $0.29. The savings associated with our accelerated cost reductions equate to a $0.06 benefit. Collectively, a lower share count, lower interest and lower tax and other expenses adds back another $0.05 for a net reduction of $0.18 versus our previous guidance midpoint. With that, I'd like to pass the call back over to Mark.