Thank you, John. Good morning, everyone. Turning to Page 4. As John noted earlier, our second quarter results were below our low single-digit expected decline in reported sales against a continued mixed and multi-speed economic environment. The primary driver of the top line miss was market weakness in Utility & Broadband, leading to an organic sales decline of less than 1% versus the prior year. This includes approximately a 2% benefit from price, offset by lower volumes. Pricing was a tailwind in both EES and UBS, including the benefit from higher commodity costs, while pricing in CSS was slightly negative. The divestiture of the Integrated Supply business was a year-over-year impact of 350 basis points and differences in foreign exchange rates were a minor headwind. I'll provide more color on the sales drivers in the next few slides. On the lower half of the page, you can see the adjusted EBITDA impact of lower sales partially offset by gross margin. Gross margin was up 30 basis points over the prior year on a reported basis. As discussed in the prior quarter earnings call, the Integrated Supply business had a lower gross margin than the balance of the company. The year-over-year improvement in the gross rate was primarily due to the mix benefit of the divestiture. Gross margin, excluding this benefit, was down slightly and entirely due to lower gross margin in our CSS business. Gross margins in EES and UBS, excluding the impact of the Integrated Supply divestiture, were up versus the prior year. Excluding the impact of the Integrated Supply divestiture, adjusted SG&A increased slightly due to the annual merit increase, partially offset by cost actions taken in previous quarters. Turning to Page 5. On a sequential basis, organic sales were up approximately 5% with all three SBUs contributing. The Integrated Supply divestiture and differences in foreign exchange rates were a combined headwind of 390 basis points, offset by 160 basis points due to one additional workday in the second quarter. As you can see on the chart on the bottom of the page, adjusted EBITDA margins were up 90 basis points from the first quarter. All 3 SBUs posted sequential improvements of 50 to 130 basis points. Gross margin was up 60 basis points sequentially due to the Integrated Supply divestiture as well as favorable cash discounts and inventory adjustments. As I mentioned earlier, gross margin expanded sequentially in both EES and UBS, offset by weaker gross margins within our CSS business. The SG&A impact on the sequential improvement to adjusted EBITDA was neutral as the benefit of the Integrated Supply divestiture offset the annual merit increase effective on April 1. SG&A as a percentage of sales improved sequentially due to operating leverage on higher sales. Turning to Page 6. This is a slide we first showed last quarter and supports that WESCO has outperformed both our supplier partners and our distributor peers over the past few years. The chart on the left compares WESCO's year-over-year organic growth to the average organic growth of our 10 largest publicly traded supplier partners, weighted to the proportion of our purchases that they represent. You can see that WESCO has outperformed the supplier average since the middle of 2021. The chart on the right compares WESCO's year-over-year organic growth to the electrical and data communications distributors in the Baird Distribution Survey, which is published quarterly. We think these two data sets clearly demonstrate that our growth has exceeded our peers, and we have outperformed the market over the last three years. Turning to Slide 7. Second quarter organic sales in our EES business were down about 1% on both an organic and reported basis. But more importantly, we have seen a stabilization in the top line which has allowed the business to leverage the cost actions taken over the last year. Organic sales improved each month as we moved through the second quarter. Additionally, our EES sales in Canada were up low single digits due to some large project wins, and we continue to see significant growth in the EES international markets. Similar to the first quarter, construction sales were down low single digits due to continued weakness in solar, partly offset by growth from large project shipments. Industrial sales were up low single digits with strong project activity offset by some weakness in day-to-day MRO, consistent with recent market data in the U.S. OEM sales were down low single digits. Backlog was down about 2% on a sequential basis and down about 9% from the prior year. This represents normal seasonality for backlog as orders taken in Q4 and Q1 are converted into revenue in Q2 and Q3. Lastly, as anticipated, EES adjusted EBITDA margin continued to improve and was up approximately 40 basis points, driven by higher gross margin, benefits of cost actions taken in 2023 and 2024 and continued cost controls. Turning to Slide 8. While CSS sales in the quarter were generally in line with our expectations, adjusted EBITDA margin was impacted by the mix of sales which I'll explain shortly. Second quarter sales in CSS were up approximately 1% from the prior year on both an organic and reported basis. We are encouraged by the growth acceleration in our data center business. Data center sales were up high teens in the second quarter versus the prior year, an acceleration from the first quarter where year-over-year sales were up low single digits. Growth was broad-based with all end users, hyperscale, multi-tenant, and enterprise data center customers. The growth opportunity of this business continues to be exceptionally strong, given the step change in data center capacity, driven by artificial intelligence. Enterprise network infrastructure, which comprises structured cabling and Internet service providers was down low single digits due to declining sales of service providers, as well as weakness in commercial office space. Security sales were down mid-single digits, driven by a general slowdown in nonresidential commercial construction and weaker office space activity. The security market has contracted over the past few quarters, but we expect it will grow in the second half of this year as comparisons ease significantly, particularly in the fourth quarter. CSS backlog continues to climb after normalizing last year due to lead time compression and increased product availability. Backlog was down 4% versus the prior year, but up 13% from the end of 2023 and up 8% sequentially from the last quarter. Adjusted EBITDA margin for CSS was down 160 basis points. The primary driver of the decrease was gross margin in the enterprise network infrastructure business. Several factors drove the CSS EBITDA margin contraction versus the prior year. First, customer mix. We had a higher mix of shipments in support of large programs that are below the average CSS gross margin, including a higher percentage of direct ship projects. As I mentioned previously, sales were generally in line with our expectations overall. The day-to-day business was slower than anticipated, which has a higher margin. While we were able to make up the sales with projects, the mix of sales impacted margins. Second, additional sales through channel. In the second quarter, we worked with our suppliers to service several large projects that historically were sold direct to the end user by the supplier. This is the result of customers looking to consolidate their supplier base and take advantage of our global one-stop shop capabilities. In the future, we anticipate winning more of these types of projects and expanding margin by adding additional services to our offering. Third, we've built this business to deliver on the higher growth rates of secular trends. We have invested in people and capabilities to capture this growth, but with sales in the quarter up only 1%, we did not get the operating leverage we expect to get in the future. For the balance of the year, we expect stable gross margins and additional operating leverage in CSS. Turning to Slide 9. Organic sales in UBS were down 3% in the quarter and reported sales were down 15% due to the integrated supply divestiture. The utility market is experiencing some short-term softness related to customer destocking and lower project activity, which is a function of the current interest rate and regulatory environment. We expect these impacts to last through the end of the year. We continue to benefit from the secular trends of electrification, green energy, and grid modernization and believe that these trends will support growth acceleration as we move into 2025 and beyond. Broadband sales were down high single digits, reflecting continued demand weakness as customers continue to work through inventory and delay purchases until government funding is released. At present, it is difficult to call the bottom in this market in the U.S., but we are driving growth in our Canadian operations. We expect this market to improve in 2025, with the timing of Broadband Equity Access and Deployment or BEAD dollars getting spent. Backlog was down 15% from the prior year and down 10% on a sequential basis as there has been a delay on projects being converted from the opportunity pipeline into backlog. Adjusted EBITDA margins were healthy despite the near-term top line headwinds. EBITDA margins were favorable approximately 90 basis points versus the prior year, driven by the divestiture of Integrated Supply and improvements to gross margin in the core business. Turning to Page 10. On this slide, we have highlighted a recent win by each of our business units that, in aggregate, represent more than $100 million of future project sales. These examples reinforce the positive trend of our bidding and cross-sell activity to win increasingly large complex projects. Also worth noting are the end markets that these projects serve, a major power plant retrofit, a cloud data center project, and a large renewable energy project. Moving to Slide 11. On this slide, we have outlined our return to capital to shareholders over the past 3 years, along with our capital allocation priorities for 2024 in the long term. We said we intended to use the full $300 million of after-tax proceeds from the Integrated Supply divestiture for share repurchases in the second quarter, and we hit that target. In addition, our 2024 free cash flow outlook of $900 million at the midpoint provides us with options to opportunistically repurchase additional shares, reduce debt, and/or pursue M&A in the second half of the year. Recall that we provided a five-year outlook for operating cash flow generation of $3.5 billion to $4.5 billion at our Investor Day in 2022. We remain on track to achieve this target and expect to return approximately 40% of our operating cash flow to shareholders through dividends, including our common dividend, which we increased 10% in 2024 and executing our $1 billion share repurchase authorization. The upside cash generation also allows us to continue to invest for organic growth and operational efficiency through our digital transformation. Turning to Page 12. Historically, strong free cash flow has been a hallmark of WESCO in our distribution business model. With the significant sales growth we delivered in 2021 and 2022, we invested heavily in net working capital and we're well below our expected free cash flow conversion. We delivered strong free cash flow beginning in the back half of 2023, in which the company generated approximately $400 million. This has been followed by free cash flow generation of $500 million in the first half of 2024, a record for WESCO. On a trailing 12-month basis, which this chart bridges to adjusted net income, free cash flow was more than $900 million with more than $80 million of cash generation from net working capital. Now moving to Page 13 for the key drivers of our strategic business units. We are reducing our topline organic growth forecast, primarily driven by market conditions in our utility and broadband markets. Looking specifically at UBS. In 2022 and 2023, we generated double-digit growth in utility. The recent softness is coming off a historically high base. We now expect the Utility business to be down low to mid-single digits versus a high single-digit increase previously. This is driven by a change in market conditions due to continued customer destocking and lower project activity. However, if you look at long-term capital expenditure budgets for the utility market to address the rising power demand curve, there is strong momentum for this business to significantly surpass the historical growth rates over the long-term. For Broadband, we had assumed that we would see the market recover by the end of 2024, with growth in our Canadian business offsetting continued weakness in the U.S. However, the spending of BEAD dollars continues to be delayed due to customer destocking and delays of purchases until government dollars are released, we now expect our broadband sales to be down high single digits versus our previous outlook of down low single digits. Within EES, our overall forecast remains largely unchanged. In 2024, we expect EES reported sales growth to be flat to up low single digits as construction end markets remain pressured despite an increase in large project activity. The Industrial business is expected to benefit from continued growth in many of the end market verticals we support, but the recent softness in our day-to-day business has moderated some of the expected upside. OEM is expected to be roughly flat. Looking at our CSS segment, we generated accelerating growth in our data center business in the second quarter, which was up high teens versus a low single-digit increase in the first quarter. We now expect our data center business to be up mid-teens for the full-year. And based on share gains in security, we expect to outgrow the market and for the business to be relatively flat based on strong comparisons in the second half of 2023. Lastly, our enterprise network infrastructure is expected to be up low single digits. Moving to Slide 14 for our 2024 outlook. As we noted earlier, while we still see a long-term secular growth opportunity in utility, the market has downshifted. Based primarily on the reduction to the utility market forecast, along with continued delays in the broadband market recovery, we are reducing the range and adjusting our reported topline outlook to down 1.5% to down 3.5% versus the prior year. As we noted on the previous slide, the change to the topline outlook is entirely driven by a shift in market conditions. Adjusting for the impact of Integrated Supply divestiture and foreign exchange, we expect organic sales to be down 1.5% to up 0.5%. This translates into total revenue for 2024 of $21.6 billion to $22 billion. At the midpoint of the range, price is expected to contribute about 1 point to the top line with volume slightly negative. Due to the lower sales outlook along with our results year-to-date, we are reducing our full year EBITDA outlook to $1.55 billion versus $1.7 billion and an adjusted EBITDA margin range of 7% to 7.3%. We are also adjusting our outlook for adjusted EPS to a range of $12 to $13. We feel that this updated outlook is appropriate, given the mixed economic environment and our current business results. Additionally, we are reaffirming our previously increased outlook for free cash flow to be in the range of $800 million to $1 billion. This free cash flow outlook represents the highest free cash flow in our history and more than 100% of adjusted net income. We have assumed in our free cash flow outlook that net working capital days improve and continue to target a three-day improvement to inventory days outstanding. On leverage, we finished the second quarter at 2.9x trailing 12-month EBITDA. We now expect leverage to improve slightly through the balance of the year, but to end above the high end of our 1.5 to 2.5x range. Turning to Page 15. This slide shows the year-over-year monthly and quarterly sales growth comparisons for the past 18 months and our expectations for the third quarter. Sequentially, we expect reported sales to be flat to down low single digits. EBITDA margins should also be stable sequentially with the second quarter as we continue to manage cost effectively in a mixed economic environment. Preliminary July sales per workday were down low single digits versus the prior year, excluding the impact of the Integrated Supply divestiture in the base period. The sales outlook at the midpoint of the third quarter and the balance of the year assumes the current run rate of sales continues, while the high end of the guidance range assumes more normal seasonality. Turning to Slide 16. Before we open it up for your questions today, I wanted to highlight our upcoming Investor Day on Thursday, September 26 from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Central Time. We will be giving an update on our digital transformation with more details on what we are executing and the benefits to our customers, suppliers, employees, and our investors. We will also discuss the path to our long-term goal of a 10% EBITDA margin. And finally, we will talk in more detail around our upsized cash generation and how we intend to use this cash flow to increase investment returns. With that, operator, we can now open the call to questions.