Thank you, Peter. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our second quarter 2024 conference call. I'll start my remarks with a review of our revenue for the second quarter by end market, channel and region. Then Dave will take you through a review of the second quarter financial results and our guidance for the third quarter. After that, I'll give you a progress report on our 2024 initiatives under our five year strategic plan to answer any of your questions. For the second quarter, we are reporting results in line with our revenue, gross profit margin and SG&A guidance. Revenue of $741.2 million was essentially flat versus the first quarter, impacted negatively by lower volume pulls from automotive customers and from industrial customer destocking. The revenue was impacted positively by an additional revenue of $13.1 million from our Newport acquisition and also sparks from China and Taiwan related to AI server demand, notebooks and consumer devices. Distribution revenue was up quarter-on-quarter, a testament to our intensified customer reengagement initiative, supported by the capacity that has come online over the last 12 months. We are making good progress in executing Vishay 3.0. As we expected, the inventory digestion continued into the second quarter. Some of the customers are still carrying a high level of semiconductor inventory from some of their suppliers. Nevertheless, we are starting to see indications of inventory rebalancing and bookings are steadily improving, particularly from automotive and industrial customers. We've also started to see replenishment activities from the distributor channel and on certain passive product lines, higher consumption rates for semiconductors as demand ramps up for AI servers and vehicle computing. Let's take a closer look now at the second quarter revenue, starting with a review of revenue by end market on Slide 3. Automotive revenue declined 6.7% from the first quarter and 13.6% compared to last year's second quarter as Tier 1 automotive customers pulled below their schedule agreement plans primarily in Europe. OEMs in North America and Europe pulled back on EV production and postponed some of their new EV platforms. Based on input from our customers in Europe and the Americas, we're seeing flat automotive demand tied to persistent high interest rates, driving consumers to look towards purchasing less expensive compact cars, containing less electronic content. Even though sales were lower, design activity continued on all automotive electronics, including battery management systems, ADAS and with the increasing discussion around AI chipsets. We also stepped up our engagement with automotive OEMs and Tier 1s. Because we are investing in capacity expansion, an automotive OEM signed an important first-time silicon MOSFET supply agreement with us. For our silicon carbide push, we held more technical meetings with existing and potential new customers around silicon carbide MOSFETs tied to traction inverter projects and assemblies and modules for onboard charging. These customer programs are planned for 2026 and 2027 launches. Our action item is to provide customer engineers with samples of both the Planar and the Trench silicon carbide technologies as we now move towards commercializing these products. Turning to industrial end markets, with customers continuing to destock inventory during the second quarter, overall demand remains sluggish. Excluding Newport, industrial revenue was essentially flat quarter-over-quarter. Late in the quarter, we started to see improved bookings in Asia for power meters, high-voltage DC applications and factory automation, including a first signal of improving orders in China. We also received sizable follow-on orders for high-voltage capacitors under a smart grid supply agreement with a European customer for a total of now approximately $113 million since the beginning of the year. Design activity remains focused on smart grid infrastructure, industrial automation, renewable energy and energy storage. Near-term, we expect industrial automation will continue to be a key driver of design activity while the government funding for EV charging networks and grid projects keeps getting pushed out. Revenue to aerospace and defense end markets declined 3.3% from the quarter and was 17.2% higher than last year's second quarter. Sales were down due to a temporary lull in orders pulls from key OEMs, both in the Americas and Europe related to their supplies change shortages and a directive also from the Turkish Government to not receive products made in Israel. Orders for applications around missile guidance systems and combat aircraft remains strong; demand from OEMs in the Americas remains solid with some of them pushing for master supply agreements to facilitate awarding contracts to Vishay as a preferred supplier. This is a direct result of our customer reengagement initiative. We are also supplying military materials to EMS to satisfy their contracts with aerospace and defense OEMs. As we look forward into the year, we expect to complete these supply agreements in the third quarter, setting us up for increased share of new contracts in Q4 and in 2025. Medical revenue increased 14.7% from the first quarter and was slightly below last year's second quarter. We delivered an all-time high of custom magnetics to our largest medical customer who has now resolved their supply chain issues. Because we see great growth potential in the medical end markets, we have hired a medical segment leader, a newly created role at Vishay, who is focused on deepening our engagement with existing customers and developing relationships with new customers, more fully leveraging the breadth of our product portfolio, similar to the steps we're taking with the distributor reengagement initiative. This medical leader will bring the appropriate technologies of Vishay into the discussions with these medical customers. While design activity remain focused on implantable devices and remote monitoring equipment, we also see activity in home patient monitoring and diagnostics as these applications have taken hold, along with the adoption of telemedicine that started during the pandemic. Revenue from the other categories included telecom, computing and consumer end markets was down 2.3% quarter-over-quarter and 37.3% versus the second quarter last year. We continue to see pockets of growth like orders for AI servers and server power projects as key manufacturers in China and Taiwan now launched initial production. Orders related to notebook computers continue to grow in Asia as well. Design activity continued to increase in the areas of AI server power, AI chipsets, laptops and tablets and storage networks. While we have a good initial position on AI reference designs, mainly with MOSFETs and diodes, we are designing in more of the Vishay portfolio to gain a greater percentage of Vishay components on those [Technical Difficulty] at key chipset makers in the emerging AI market. This is another example of the benefits of our Vishay 3.0 initiatives as we've increased our field application engineering resources and extended capacity, we're now positioning Vishay to fully participate in the AI market growth. Turning to channel sales on Slide 4. OEM revenue decreased 11.1% quarter-over-quarter and 19.1% year-over-year on lower volumes from industrial and automotive customers, primarily in the Americas and Europe. EMS revenue increased 1% versus Q1, 15.9% below prior year, with increasing order flow tied to improving customer demand and higher demand related to AI servers, particularly in China and Taiwan. In the Americas, EMS revenue, excluding military, was lower as end customers reduced forecast and lead times remain short, allowing customers to wait and be less visible about their future demand needs. Our EMS customers, which are focused on military end markets are performing well and have positive outlooks. Distribution revenue increased 7.6% versus the first quarter and was down 15.5% versus last year. Our initiative to deepen engagement with our distribution customers is beginning to pay off. Part number and pricing reviews have resulted in increased SKU count on the distributor shelves. In Q2 2024, we've increased our SKU count at distribution by over 10,000 part numbers quarter-over-quarter. These positions -- help to position Vishay and win increased share of turns business. At the same time, we continue to meet with the distributors to expand our local coverage, particularly in Asia. Distribution inventory worldwide declined by $22.8 million, while we added approximately $14 million of inventory on the new SKUs. Inventory held steady quarter-over-quarter at 26 weeks. POS worldwide was 2.3% lower with weakness in Europe and some softness in the Americas, while POS improved in Asia due to strong demand from the China EV customers, especially those who are increasing their focus on overseas markets for growth. Finally, let's turn to Slide 5 for a look at the revenue by region. Revenue in the Americas was slightly higher, up 1% on distribution and medical, while Asia revenue was -- with some bright spots developing on industrial and AI. Europe revenues were lower as its macroeconomic challenges continued to weaken demand. Before turning the call over to Dave, I'd like to express my appreciation to all Vishay employees for their continued dedication and commitment to implementing Vishay 3.0. Their focus to deepen our customer engagement, to drive internal cost controls and to become business minded in everything we do aligns all of us to faster decision-making as well as driving towards greater financial outcomes. I'll now hand the call over to Dave with the financial review of Q2.