Thank you, Gregg, and good afternoon, everyone. During the fiscal second quarter of 2023, we generated revenue of $216 million at the low end of our guidance range, which represents a 10% sequential decline when compared to the $241.3 million in the fiscal first quarter of 2023 and growth of approximately 25% year-over-year. As Gregg mentioned, we continue to see strong demand for our silicon carbide solutions. However, the supply chain issues we discussed last quarter caused variability in our quarterly revenue in the second quarter with equipment spare part shortages limiting our Durham fab output, while at the same time, we continue to work through the ramp of our taller 150-millimeter bulls. I am pleased to report that we have made significant progress on both issues and they are currently processing these improvements through our production cycle. In terms of our power devices, which grew approximately 48% in the quarter versus last year, we saw strong performance ahead of our expectations mostly resolving the Durham spare parts supply chain issue we discussed last quarter. From a power device supply perspective, we now believe that we have achieved full capacity in our Durham wafer fab and virtually all future topline growth for power devices will come directly from the Mohawk Valley fab. From a materials perspective, we made very significant progress in improving yields on our taller 150-millimeter bulls. These yields are now comparable to our historical yields on shorter bulls. However, back-end wafer processing cycle times recovered later in the quarter than anticipated, resulting in lower than expected Q2 revenues for our materials products. We believe this past quarter represents the bottom of the revenue trough related to this issue as we exited the quarter at yields, cycle times and shipping rates that will all support future materials revenue growth. During the quarter, we also saw weaker demand for RF products due to secular headwinds with recession related pullback in 5G demand. This resulted in lower than expected revenue for RF devices, which we expect to remain weaker in the second half of this fiscal year. Non-GAAP gross margin in the second quarter was 33.6%, compared to 35.6% last quarter and 35.4% in the prior year period, representing 180-basis-point decline year-over-year. Gross margin was negatively impacted by the previously mentioned lower yields on the taller 150-millimeter bulls and lower output of the Durham fab due to the supply chain challenges. While we made significant progress on both issues in the quarter and expect to see improvement moving forward, they both represented a drag on gross margin during the second quarter. In addition, RF devices continue to be dilutive to our consolidated gross margin. As we discussed, because of the immense demand for our power devices, we have not been able to optimize the RF manufacturing footprint as we had previously planned. We expect our RF product line will negatively impact our consolidated gross margin by approximately [Technical Difficulty] basis points for the next few years. As a result of these items, we generated adjusted earnings per share of negative $0.11 in the fiscal second quarter, compared to negative $0.04 a quarter ago and negative $0.16 in the same period last year. Notably, adjusted EPS this quarter was favorably impacted by approximately $0.05 of non-repeatable events in other income and tax. Excluding these non-repeatable items from our earnings, we would have been at an approximately $0.16 loss per share during the quarter. Before I discuss our guidance, I will provide a quick overview of our balance sheet position. We ended the quarter with approximately $2.5 billion of cash and liquidity on our balance sheet to support our growth plans. DSO was 62 days, while inventory days on hand was 161 days, which is 26 days higher than Q1. Free cash flow during the quarter was negative $171 million, comprised of negative $67 million of operating cash flow and $104 million of net capital expenditures. During the quarter, we incurred start-up costs primarily related to the Mohawk Valley fab ramp, totaling approximately $38 million. Moving forward, we expect overall startup and underutilization charges for Mohawk Valley to wind down as we ramp the fab included a non-GAAP adjustment for these startup costs in the reconciliation table in our earnings release. In terms of our capital needs, since we last spoke, we have made great progress in securing funding for our greenfield facility construction and long-term capacity expansion plan. In November, we announced a successful convertible note offering anchored by one of our largest strategic partners BorgWarner. We were extremely encouraged by the demand we see in the marketplace and believe it sets us up well to secure further funding. Additionally, we are still evaluating other avenues of additional funding, including government funding in the United States and Europe, as well as upfront customer payments or investments, the capital markets and debt. As we stated previously, cost of capital and potential dilution is top of mind for us when we are pursuing additional capital. Now moving on to our fiscal third quarter outlook. We are targeting revenue in the range of $210 million to $230 million. Our revenue guidance reflects continued strong demand, as well as supply execution improvement in both our power device and materials product lines, partially offset by continued softness in RF demand. Our Q3 non-GAAP gross margin is expected to be in the range of 32% to 34% as we expect to see some improvement in both power device and materials products, offset by RF weakness due to the lower volumes. We expect non-GAAP operating expenses of approximately $98 million to $100 million for the third quarter of fiscal 2023. We expect Q3 non-GAAP operating loss to be between $22 million and $30 million, and non-operating net loss to be approximately $3 million. We believe that we will realize approximately $5 million to $7 million of non-GAAP tax benefits as a result and expect Q3 non-GAAP net loss to be between $15 million and $20 million or a loss of $0.12 per diluted share to $0.16 per diluted share. Our non-GAAP EPS target excludes acquired intangibles amortization, non-cash stock-based compensation, project transformation and transaction costs, factory start-up and underutilization costs and other items as outlined in our press release today. As always, our Q3 targets are based on several factors that could vary greatly, including supply chain dynamics, overall demand, product mix, factory productivity and the competitive environment. With that, let me pass it back to Gregg for his closing remarks.