Thank you, Greg. As Greg just underscored, our servicing and asset management businesses along with cash origination fees from debt financing and property sales, allowed us to generate strong year-over-year growth in adjusted EBITDA and adjusted core EPS. One of the analysts who covers W&D recently did an analysis of peak earnings in 2022 to trough earnings in 2023 for W&D and several of our largest competitors. What the data shows, essentially contrary to many investors perceptions is that W&D's adjusted EBITDA was down dramatically less than the competition at just 8%, versus an average of 36% for CBRE, JLL and Newmark. The conventional thinking is that those platforms with scaled workforce solutions and asset management platforms would endure a downturn better than W&D due to long-term, low margin facilities management and outsourcing contracts. Not so, and that is due to the strength of W&D servicing and asset management businesses. And what is really exciting is that as we enter this next cycle, W&D's capital markets focus will benefit disproportionately from increased transaction volumes in financing, property sales, appraisals, research and investment banking. As W&D investors know, originating loans with mortgage servicing rights is a large and important component of W&D's revenues and GAAP EPS. Over the past two years, we have endured something of a perfect storm with regard to MSRs due to reduced GSE lending volumes, reduced servicing fees and reduced loan duration. Going forward, we believe all three of these components should improve significantly. The GSEs only do one thing, lend on residential real estate, and they happen to have the cheapest cost of capital of any market participant. They will play their role as the market recovers and as they grow their lending volumes, so will W&D. Regarding servicing fees, we are seeing a recovery in pricing due to lower rates and investor spreads remaining tight. Finally, regarding term over the past several years, many borrowers went short and put on fixed rate debt for only five years, thinking rates would come back down and they could refinance. To put numbers to this in 2020, 45% of all Fannie Mae multifamily loans were ten-year loans and 0% were five-year loans. In the first six months of 2024, the percentage of ten-year loans at Fannie Mae dropped to 26% while the volume of five-year loans grew from 0% to 32% of total lending. As the yield curve normalizes and CRE owners can acquire assets with positive leverage once again, we will see more borrowers go along and request seven and ten-year paper. Higher financing volumes, normalized servicing fees and longer loan terms will benefit our mortgage servicing rights substantially in the coming years. Let me give an example of a W&D client going long, as it is instructive on a number of fronts. The client's existing loan was $34 million and the new loan only sized to $30 million. The fundamentals of the property were sound, so the borrower put $4 million of fresh equity into the property to pay off the $34 million loan. In the process, they bought down the interest rate by 30 basis points from 5.80% to 5.50% and at that coupon rate they decided to go long and lock up the financing for ten years. There are several themes to this loan. First, there is plenty of equity capital to be invested in properties. Second, all in borrowing costs, particularly on multifamily properties, are not that high and are getting lower fast. And with good assets and appropriate financing, many owners are starting to go long and push out long-term. This example is not unique to multifamily. Some of you may have heard about the refinancing of 277 Park Avenue in Manhattan. This is not a financing walker. No, I've worked on, but is instructive of today's market. The property had a $750 million loan at a 3.60% interest rate that matured this year. The new loan only sized to $500 million, the new interest rate being almost double the old one. So the owners wrote a $250 million check to pay off the maturing mortgage building, recently signing 175,000 square feet of new leases to bring the building back to 98% occupancy. This is a trophy asset in America's largest office market, but a $250 million cash in refinancing is not a minor deal, reflecting that there is still plenty of debt and equity capital in the market for great assets and that new office leases are actually being signed. Let me shift from the market to technology for a moment. We continue to invest in data analytics to find new business and better serve our clients. Our Galaxy application continues to generate new client opportunities and in Q2 77% of our refinancings were new loans to Walker & Dunlop. While new lending opportunities come to us in myriad ways, client coverage, referrals, sales transactions and in some instances, just dumb luck, Galaxy has been an incredibly powerful tool that shows our team the composition of a client's entire debt portfolio and given the very small volume of loan maturities in W&D's existing loan portfolio for 2024 and 2025, the name of the game for our team is winning new loans and new customers away from the competition, and Galaxy helps tremendously with this. Our technology team also created a new digital experience for W&D, servicing clients named Client Navigator that allows our borrowers to do analytics on their loans and interface with W&D through a dramatically enhanced user interface. We currently have over 3,000 active users on Client Navigator and as you can see on this slide, our customer service ratings on Client Navigator is above some of the top financial services institutions in the world. As the market continues to recover and then grow extremely well positioned, we have the bankers and brokers today to achieve our drive to 25 loan origination target of $65 billion and our investment sales target of $25 billion if the market returns to normalized transaction levels. W&D is known for being one of the very best at multibillion dollar multifamily financings and our team is currently being asked to pitch on large portfolio financings that have not existed in the market over the past two years. What is new and very exciting is that our multifamily investment sales team is also being asked to pitch on large portfolio transactions. Add to that our valuation services, search and investment banking capabilities and our go-to-market presence has never been stronger. Howard Smith, our longtime President who retired at the beginning of 2024, stepped down from the W&D Board in May. Then in June, our longtime Lead Independent Director, Mike Malone died suddenly and tragically from a heart attack. Mike was an amazing Director and friend and he will be missed by our fellow board members and senior executives dearly. Jeff Hayward, Executive Vice President, Fannie Mae, prior to retiring in January of 2024, joined the W&D board in Q2 and has had an immediate impact due to having run the Fannie Mae DUS program for 12 years, and also in Q2 McKinsey Partner and Chairman of McKinsey North America Gary Pinkus joined our board and while we will miss Howard and Mike's contributions greatly, we are very excited to have Jeff and Gary's insights and wisdom going forward. As Greg said earlier, we feel very good about our current pipeline of business and our expectations for deal volumes and financial results in the back half of 2024. Lower interest rates and the need to recycle and invest equity capital should push property sales, financing, appraisals, research and investment banking volumes higher. What is imperative is that we remain focused on our clients and exceeding their expectations. We need to retain and expand our team as the market recovers. We need to reinforce our credit discipline as new opportunities arise. And as I noted earlier, we need to be constantly evolving to meet the needs of the new economy, not just the established economy where we have been so successful over the past two decades. Thanks to the people of Walker & Dunlop and our business model, our financial results during the great tightening were impacted significantly less than the competition. Now that we sit at the doorsteps of a recovery and new cycle, we feel extremely well positioned to benefit from the macroeconomic shift. Thank you for joining us this morning. Operator, please open the line for any questions. Thank you.