Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. Turning to Page 4. As John noted, our third quarter sales were at the higher end of our outlook range. The economic environment remains mixed as market weakness continued in utility and broadband, but we delivered strong growth in our WESCO data center solutions business. Price contributed approximately 2% versus the prior year, offset by lower volumes. The divestiture of our Integrated Supply business was a headwind of approximately 350 basis points, along with a small headwind from differences in foreign exchange rates. These headwinds were partially offset by the benefit of an additional work day. 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 higher gross margin. Gross margin was up 50 basis points over the prior year. As discussed previously, the Integrated Supply business had a lower gross margin than the balance of the company, and approximately 40 basis points of the year-over-year gross margin improvement was due to the mix benefit of the divestiture. I want to point out that our core gross margin, excluding this benefit, was up versus the prior year with stable billing margins and slightly higher supplier volume rebates. Adjusted SG&A increased, primarily reflecting people-related investments, M&A and higher operating costs. Turning to Page 5. On a sequential basis, organic sales were flat, with growth in CSS, offset by lower sales in EES and UBS. There was a slight benefit from foreign exchange rates in our EES and CSS businesses. As you can see on the chart at the bottom of the page, adjusted EBITDA margin was essentially flat with the second quarter, which was better than our expectations for a slight sequential decline. CSS EBITDA margin was up 90 basis points sequentially, while EES and UBS were both down sequentially due to the impact of lower sales on operating leverage. Gross margin was up 20 basis points sequentially, reflecting favorable mix, a onetime supplier volume rebate adjustment and higher billing margin. Gross margins expanded sequentially in both EES and CSS, offset by slightly lower gross margins within our UBS business. Higher SG&A was primarily driven by people-related investments and higher operating costs. As mentioned, our EBITDA margin was essentially flat sequentially with the second quarter. Recall, at our Investor Day, we indicated that adjusted EBITDA margin through the first two months of the quarter was below our expectations. Two drivers of the improvement compared to what we shared at our Investor Day. First, we had a onetime benefit on supplier volume rebates in the month of September. And second, we had favorable mix from higher stock sales than anticipated in September, which comes with a higher gross margin. Turning to Page 6. This is a slide that we've shown for the last several quarters to support our view that WESCO has outperformed the market over the past few years. The chart on the left side 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 almost every quarter 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. Note that our CSS business unit sales were up 8% compared with the Baird Datacom Index that was up 7%. When comparing our results to the electrical survey, note we have a disproportionate mix of utility which is impacting total sales due to the decline in our UBS business. We think these two data sets support our view that WESCO's growth has exceeded our peers and we have outperformed the market over the last three years. Let me want to do our business unit results, beginning with EES on Slide 7. EES organic sales were down 3% in the third quarter. Reported sales were down about 2%, which included an extra work day compared with the prior year. Construction sales were flat in the third quarter as growth in Canada was offset by weakness in solar and project timing in the United States. Sales were up low single-digits sequentially for the second consecutive quarter, reflecting improved momentum in construction. Industrial sales were down low single-digits. Similar to construction, we delivered growth in Canada, offset by a weaker U.S. market, reflecting a broad-based industrial slowdown in the third quarter. OEM sales were up low single-digits, also reflecting improving momentum. Backlog was up 2% on a sequential basis and down about 1% from the prior year. Lastly, EES adjusted EBITDA margin was flat year-over-year despite lower sales driven by higher gross margins, the benefits of previous cost actions and continued cost controls. The secular trends of electrification, automation, green energy and supply chain relocation will drive future growth for the segment. Turning to Slide 8. CSS sales were up 8% year-over-year on an organic basis and up 10% as reported. This was driven by WESCO Data Center Solutions, which was up more than 40% with balanced growth across all three end-use customer types, hyperscale, multi-tenant data center and enterprise. Security returned to growth in the third quarter and was up low single-digits. This growth was offset by lower sales in our enterprise network infrastructure business, which was down mid single-digits. We continue to see softness in wireless and structured cabling, that was only partially offset by strength in our service provider business. CSS backlog was up 8% sequentially and up 15% versus the prior year, reflecting increasing order momentum. Compared with the end of 2023, CSS backlog is up 22%. Adjusted EBITDA margin for CSS was down 90 basis points versus the prior year, primarily reflecting the mix of large projects in the quarter with a lower gross margin. Importantly, gross margin was up 20 basis points sequentially, reflecting the expected stabilization that we had called out last quarter. We expect CSS EBITDA margin to increase sequentially in the fourth quarter, driven by higher sales and operating cost leverage. Turning to Slide 9. Organic sales in UBS were down 7% in the quarter and reported sales were down 18%, primarily due to the Integrated Supply divestiture. As we outlined last quarter, the utility market is continuing to experience 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 continue in the fourth quarter. We remain confident in the future benefit from the secular trends of electrification, green energy and grid modernization, and believe that these trends will support growth acceleration over the long-term. Broadband sales were down mid single digits, reflecting continued demand weakness in the United States. Customers continue to work through inventory and delay purchases until government funding is released. However, momentum is improving in Canada, and we delivered a second consecutive quarter of sales growth in our Canadian operations. Backlog was down 7% sequentially and 14% lower year-over-year as there has been a delay on projects being converted from the opportunity pipeline into the backlog. Adjusted EBITDA margins were down 40 basis points, primarily reflecting the lower sales in the quarter. Turning to Page 10. On this slide, we are highlighting a recent win by each of our business units. These are all substantial business awards that span multiple years and range from $50 million to more than $2 billion. These examples reinforce the positive trend of our bidding and cross-sell activity to win increasingly large, complex, multiyear customer contracts. Also worth noting are the end markets for these multiyear agreements, a global EPC firm, a global technology company and a large investor-owned utility. Turning to Page 11. In the third quarter, we delivered $280 million of free cash flow or 145% of adjusted net income, which is substantially more than our through-the-cycle target of 100%. This has been driven by the reduction of working capital, including cash generation from a lower accounts receivable balance. Additionally, third quarter cash flow includes some timing benefits related to tax payments expected to be cash outflows in the fourth quarter. On a trailing 12-month basis, which this chart bridges to adjusted net income, free cash flow was $836 million or 127% of adjusted net income, including more than $120 million of cash generation from net working capital. We are on track to deliver full year free cash flow within our range of $800 million to $1 billion for the full year. I want to make some comments on net working capital. As you may have seen from the press release, our inventory is up versus the end of 2023 and sequentially. At the beginning of 2024, we set the goal to reduce inventory by three days. As we look to the fourth quarter, we are focused on continuing to drive reduction of inventory days. We have made substantial progress on reducing inventory days in our CSS business. However, given the lower-than-expected sales in both EES and UBS, we do not expect to see a reduction in inventory days this year. Moving to Slide 12. This is a slide we presented at our Investor Day last month which shows that we expect to deliver approximately $3 billion of free cash flow over the period of 2025 to 2027. This is in addition to our outlook for $800 million to $1 billion of free cash flow for 2024. As we outlined at Investor Day, we expect to allocate approximately 75% of this cash to value-accretive M&A. If an appropriate acquisition is not available, we will allocate capital to share repurchases and debt reduction. We expect the remaining 25% to be returned to shareholders through further share repurchases and a modest dividend. So far this year, we have repurchased $375 million worth of common shares and reduced our net debt by approximately $475 million. Turning to Page 13. This slide shows the year-over-year monthly and quarterly sales growth comparisons for the past 21 months and our expectations for the fourth quarter. Sequentially, we expect fourth quarter reported sales to be flat to down low single digits. More specifically, we expect normal seasonality from a sales per workday basis, which is typically about a 1% sequential increase compared to the third quarter. There is one fewer workday in Q4 versus Q3, which is a headwind of about 1.6%. This results in our expectation for fourth quarter reported sales to be flat to down slightly compared to the third quarter. We expect adjusted EBITDA margins will be in line or slightly lower than the third quarter as we continue to manage cost effectively in a mixed economic environment and the non-recurring positive impacts to gross margin in the third quarter are not expected to repeat. Preliminary October sales per workday are off to a good start and are tracking up mid-single digits versus the prior year, excluding the impact of the integrated supply divestiture in the base period. As you can see from the chart, October is the easiest base period comparison of the quarter. Now moving to Page 14 for the key sales drivers of our strategic business units. Within EES, the relative weakness in the U.S. has reduced our segment level outlook. We now expect reported sales to be flat-to-down slightly. We continue to expect construction to be approximately flat with the prior year. 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 so we are reducing that outlook to approximately flat. We continue to expect OEM to be flat with the prior year. Looking at our CSS segment. We now expect our enterprise network infrastructure business to be down versus the prior year based on softness with service provider customers. Based on share gains in security, we expect to outgrow the market and for the business to be relatively flat for the year. Lastly, we experienced strong accelerating growth in our data center business in the third quarter, which was up more than 40%. We expect this trend to continue in the fourth quarter. We now expect our data center business to be up more than 20% for the full year. Overall, we expect CSS reported sales to be up low- to mid-single digits in 2024. We called out last quarter, we reduced the company's top line organic growth forecast, primarily driven by market conditions in our Utility and Broadband businesses. Looking specifically at UBS, in 2022 and 2023, we generated double-digit growth in utility. The recent softness is coming off at historically high base. Based on current trends, we now expect the Utility and Broadband Solutions business to be down mid-single digits versus a low to mid-single-digit decrease previously, driven by continued customer destocking and lower project activity. Moving to Slide 15. As we mentioned earlier, we are maintaining our full year outlook ranges. However, for sales and adjusted EBITDA, we would expect to be within the lower half of those ranges if the current run rate of sales and margin were to continue through the fourth quarter. At the bottom of the page, you can see that we have narrowed the ranges of our outlooks for depreciation and amortization, interest expense and other expense and have adjusted the effective tax rate based on year-to-date results. Moving to Slide 16. We've covered a lot of material this morning, so let me briefly recap the key points before we open the call to your questions. Sales in the third quarter were at the high end of our outlook, and we continue to experience a mixed and multispeed economy. Growth and momentum in data center was very strong, offset by continued declines with our utility and broadband customers. Free cash flow of $280 million in the quarter was strong and represented 145% of adjusted net income. We have repurchased $375 million worth of common shares this year and reduced net debt by $475 million. We continue to seek opportunities to allocate capital to value-accretive M&A, followed by further share repurchases and debt reduction. With that, operator, we can now open the call for questions.