Thanks, Niraj, and good morning, everyone. I want to echo Niraj's enthusiasm at the promising signs we are seeing for 2023. Our team has been working hard to execute the plan we outlined in 2022, and we couldn't be more pleased to see the output now beginning to manifest in the results. So let's dive into the first quarter figures. Net revenue for the quarter came in at $2.8 billion, down 7.3% year-over-year. We are seeing a return to more traditional seasonality in our business and are encouraged by the improving trends we see in order growth. As we shared before, we expected order volume and active customer count to pick up as inflationary prices abated, and we are starting to see evidence of this dynamic playing out. The picture between our geographic segments remains largely unchanged with net revenue in our U.S. segment down 5% year-over-year, and our international segment down 14.4%, excluding the impact of FX. I'll now move further down the P&L. As I do, please note that the remaining financials include depreciation and amortization, but exclude equity-based compensation, related taxes and other adjustments. I will use the same basis when discussing our outlook as well. Gross margin had another stellar quarter, coming in at 29.7%, even as we maintained a robust promotional calendar. Our team continues to make meaningful headway on our operational cost savings, as Niraj discussed, and you are beginning to see that flow through to this line. New York described these savings is process oriented, meaning they will hold and, in some cases, improve as our volume increases, and he noted that we've achieved over half of our targeted annualized savings. Some of which you're starting to see show up in gross margin, while the rest we have passed on to price. It's important to note that we see these savings as structural margin expansion on the road map to our longer-term target gross margins in the mid-30s range. Last quarter, I mentioned that as we see these savings begin to accrue, we may choose to reinvest some of them in the customer experience through sharper pricing. The mix will be dictated by the macro environment we see over the duration of the year. However, I think one important point to make here is that our operative goal is to maximize the gross profit dollars generated across a multi-quarter horizon. We can do this in 2 ways. The first is passing the savings directly on to incremental gross profit, driving a higher gross margin. The second is to sharpen our pricing, letting the operational savings offset the impact from a reduced take rate, effectively netting out to a gross margin that remains unchanged, but on the results in more orders and more repeat business. We will balance this dynamic to keep driving optimal outcomes over time. Our plans are to reinvest some portion of further savings in price in order to drive more volume and maintain and grow our share position while also balancing gross margin expansion. Moving on to customer service and merchant fees. We saw this line come in at 4.7% of net revenue in the first quarter. Advertising was 11.8% of net revenue as we are driving even better efficiency out of our paid channels, while we continue to face the same headwinds on the volume of free and direct traffic that we've seen for several quarters now due to the macro environment. Finally, our selling, operations, technology, general and administrative expenses totaled $484 million. As a reminder, the majority of this expense line is related to our people and the remainder covers software and other G&A. You are seeing the majority of the savings from the January reduction in force reflected in this figure. And you should expect to see this number show further moderation in Q2 as we fully run rate the cash compensation piece of the $750 million of annualized labor savings that we have now completed. However, we don't see this at the end of our cost savings journey on SOTG&A and we plan to drive low single-digit sequential compression each quarter through year-end on top of what we've already accomplished. All combined, the outperformance on gross margin and advertising as well as strength in the top line contributed to a significant improvement in adjusted EBITDA and negative $14 million this quarter or nearly breakeven a substantial improvement compared to the negative $71 million in Q4 2022 and negative $113 million in Q1 2022. Our U.S. business saw a second consecutive quarter of positive adjusted EBITDA at $29 million, and we nearly have the international adjusted EBITDA losses compared to Q4. We are excited to see the tangible benefits of our cost savings work materialize and we remain tightly unified around our future profitability goals. We ended the quarter with just over $1 billion of cash and highly liquid investments on our balance sheet and over $1.6 billion of total liquidity when including our revolving credit facility capacity. Net cash from operations was a negative $147 million and capital expenditures were $87 million, resulting in free cash flow of negative $234 million. As a reminder, the first quarter is almost always a seasonal cash outflow quarter for our business given the negative cash conversion cycle of our working capital following Q4 holiday peak. Now let's turn to guidance for the second quarter. Quarter-to-date gross revenue has been trending in the negative high single digits year-over-year, and we expect improvement due to the easier compares in May and June. We've also spoken recently to you about sequential trends and seasonality, and this trend would imply Q1 to Q2 sequential growth of just below positive 10% for net revenue. Despite the highly uncertain macro environment and the reduction in AOV due to deflation, we are excited by the ongoing improving trends in order volume and are seeing promising signs in the business. On gross margin, we would guide you to the 29% to 30% range that I framed earlier. We continue to expect customer service and merchant fees to be between 4% to 5% of net revenue and advertising to be between 12% and 13% for Q2. We forecast SOTG&A or OpEx, excluding equity-based compensation and related taxes, to come in between $460 million and $470 million showing some further improvement from Q1 levels as we fully run rate the savings from earlier in the year. So finally, as we've said several times already, if you follow the guidance I've just outlined, you should see positive adjusted EBITDA margins in the 0.5% to 1.5% range for the second quarter. Based on that range on adjusted EBITDA and the working capital dynamics as we move into the spring, you should see a sizable sequential improvement in free cash flow for Q2 relative to Q1. We are now reaching the first stage along our profitability path that we set out last August. So I want to touch on how we were thinking about the next stage, reaching mid-single-digit adjusted EBITDA margins and positive free cash flow. Let me provide an illustrative model to frame the full pro forma impact of the cost savings that you're seeing starting to flow through. To be clear, this isn't meant to be official guidance, but a framework to think about our cost initiatives holistically. For simplicity, let's use our revenue level from 2022, roughly $12.25 billion top line and apply the pro forma annualized impact of our cost savings initiatives that are already well underway and will be fully enacted by the end of 2023. At that level, we would expect to see adjusted EBITDA margins in the low to mid-single-digit range as gross margins exceed 30% and SOTG&A reaches between 14% to 15% of net revenue due to the ongoing savings work I mentioned above. At that point, we have a cost model that is geared for significant leverage when revenue grows in the future, and we expect that many of our operational efforts will enable the next set of improvements on our road map. As we've said several times in the past, once we hit a mid-single-digit adjusted EBITDA margin range, we intend to treat that as a philosophical floor on profitability for the business from which we will then balance any growth in investment spending with a desire to also continually increase profitability. Now let me translate that into cash flow. As many of you know, there are 2 major bridging items between adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow for our business, working capital and capital expenditures. Our business operates on a negative cash conversion cycle. So working capital is a source of cash when revenue grows sequentially and vice versa. Thus, the impact of working capital will be entirely a function of your assumptions on revenue. If you assume capital expenditures at plus or minus $90 million per quarter, then the $12.25 billion run rate would also translate to positive free cash flow as well, absent the working capital dynamics. Now let me touch on a few housekeeping items for the second quarter. Please assume the following: equity-based compensation and related taxes of roughly $170 million to $200 million. This will be above trend in Q2 as a function of the seasonality of our compensation cycle. As a reminder, equity-based compensation is expensed at the share price as of the day the grants are originally approved. As a result, a portion of this is related to historical grants that remain in the P&L at elevated share prices given the share price volatility we have experienced. And the remainder will hit the P&L depending on the trajectory of the share price going forward on the date new grants are approved. Depreciation amortization of approximately $102 million to $107 million, net interest expense of approximately $5 million to $6 million, weighted average shares outstanding equal to approximately 112 million and CapEx in a $90 million to $100 million range. Before I wrap up, I want to take this opportunity to commend our entire team. Over the last 9 months, we've delivered tremendous cost efficiency, while at the same time bringing our offering to the strongest place it has been in years. We are excited about the improvements we are seeing in profitability and optimistic that the success of our core recipe will continue to drive our share gains deeper into 2023. Thank you. And with that, Niraj, Steve and I will take your questions.