Thanks, Jack. You've now heard three of the longer term trends we are prioritizing in the coming years to expand our market opportunity and help advance our ecosystems. As we pursue these opportunities, we'll continue our day-to-day focus on serving our customers, operating with discipline, and driving long-term profitable growth at scale. There are three topics related to our more recent performance that I'd like to cover today. First, an overview of our strong first quarter results. Second, trends we've seen across our business in April. And third, a look at our investments through the remainder of the year. In the first quarter, we delivered strong growth across our ecosystems with gross profit of $1.71 billion up 32% year-over-year. On a combined company basis, gross profit grew 27% year-over-year in the first quarter, up from 21% in the prior quarter. We delivered adjusted EBITDA of $368 million during the quarter, an increase from $195 million in the prior year period. Adjusted operating income, which includes expenses related to stock based compensation and depreciation and amortization, was $51 million in the first quarter, up from a $42 million loss in the prior year period. We also continued to diversify our monetization streams across our ecosystems. In the first quarter, we had 14 revenue streams across Square and Cash App that generated $100 million or more in annualized gross profit, up from 11 a year ago. Let's get into each ecosystem. Cash App generated $931 million of gross profit in the first quarter an increase of 49% year-over-year. On a combined company basis, cash out gross profit grew 43% year-over-year up from 39% in the prior quarter. We delivered year-over-year growth across each component of our inflows framework; active, inflows per active, and monetization rate. We reached 53 million monthly transacting active in March, an increase of 17% year-over-year. Inflows per transacting active averaged $1136 in the first quarter up 8% year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter. And overall inflows into Cash App totaled $61 billion, up 27% year-over-year. We remain focused on driving growth in inflows for active, by growing product adoption, diversifying ways in which people can bring their money into Cash App and investing in areas that strengthen trust in Cash App. Monetization rate was 1.41% excluding gross profit contributions from our BNPL platform, up from 1.19% in the first quarter of 2022, benefiting from growth in monetized products and pricing changes implemented in 2022. On a quarter-over-quarter basis, monetization rate was up slightly from 1.39% in the fourth quarter including a modest benefit from interest income. Our financial services products are a key driver of inflows in Cash App and help us build retentive relationships with our active, particularly Cash App Card. In March, there were 20 million monthly Cash App Card active, up 34% year-over-year. An average spend per active increased on a year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter basis. In March, we had 2 million monthly direct deposit actives, one-tenth in the scale of Cash App Card monthly actives. In particular, paycheck deposits continued to increase as a percentage of overall inflows totaling $2.5 billion in March or $30 billion on an annualized basis. These paycheck deposits grew 69% year-over-year 2.5 times as fast as overall inflows in the Cash App. We've driven adoption for direct deposit active through unique boosts. And more recently, we've introduced free and network ATM withdrawal for those receiving their paycheck in Cash App. We also launched savings on Cash App earlier this year, which was a top requested feature amongst our customers. This gives customers a simple and flexible way to manage money and easily set aside funds as a separate savings balance. Since it launched in January, more than 3 million savings actives added funds to their savings balance as of the end of April. Square generated $770 million of gross profit in the first quarter, an increase of 16% year-over-year. On a combined company basis, Square gross profit was up 12% year-over-year, and further excluding gross profit from TTP loan forgiveness, Square combined company gross profit grew 21% in the first quarter, up from 16% in the prior quarter. Looking at the drivers of Square's first quarter performance. First, we continue to drive growth in software and integrated payments, with gross profit from these products up 19% year-over-year. Within this, we've seen strong momentum from our vertical point of sale offering across retail, restaurants, and appointments, where gross profit was up 42% year-over-year in aggregate. By channel, gross profit from in person channels grew faster than our online channels as we've seen online growth rates normalized compared to pandemic levels. Second, we continue to grow with larger sellers. Gross profit from mid-market sellers was also up 19% year-over-year. We remain focused on driving acquisition of larger sellers across our three key verticals of restaurants, retail, and beauty and our software offerings for those verticals. We recently introduced vertical specific home pages on our website that offers customized experiences to sellers. The updated website funnels demand to our sales team, which we are also verticalizing in order to further support our go-to-market efforts. Third, we continue to expand globally. Gross profit in our international markets outpaced overall square gross profit up 29% year-over-year, excluding contributions from our BNPL platform. We remain focused on Square's top strategic priorities in omnichannel software, upmarket and global and have been orienting our roadmaps and investments towards these areas a meaningful growth in recent years. These priorities have helped us proactively evolve our business mix from our roots inside car payments, or transactions where sellers enter an amount on a keypad and hit charge towards software and integrated payments, which enable us to create more retentive long-term relationships with sellers. As a result, Squares gross profit from flight car payments grew 5% year-over-year and represented 21% of Square gross profit during the first quarter down from 30% two years ago. We intend for the mix of Squares business related to sidecar payments to continue to decline over time. As sidecar use cases are now also well served by peer to peer solutions such as cash for business within our Cash App ecosystem. Finally, our BNPL platform generated $5.6 billion of GMD in the first quarter, an increase of 18% year-over-year inclusive of January 2022 volumes. Loss on consumer receivables were 0.7% of GMV, an improvement year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter. Next, an update on April trends. For the month of April, we expect total gross profit growth of 24% year-over-year which we expect to remain relatively consistent for the second quarter. Looking at the dynamics of each ecosystem, for the month of April, we expect Cash App gross profit to grow 35% year-over-year. A moderation compared to 43% combined company growth in the first quarter as we have lacked the benefit of pricing changes made in the first quarter of 2022. We expect Square gross profit to grow 14% year-over-year in April compared to 12% combined company growth during the first quarter as we lap the more meaningful TTP benefits from the first quarter of 2022. Excluding TTP, combined company gross profit for Square is expected to be up 16% year-over-year in April. Consistent with the fourth quarter's 16% growth and moderating compared to the first quarter's 21% growth. While first quarter growth benefited from lapping Omicron in the prior year period, April trends were in line with the fourth quarter which is when we started to see a moderation in processing volume growth particularly in discretionary verticals. For our BNPL platform, we expect year-over-year GMD growth of 20% in April, an improvement from 18% in the first quarter. Turning to our expectations for the remainder of the year. Given the gross profit momentum in our business during the first quarter, we are increasing our expectations for profitability this year. We expect to deliver adjusted EBITDA of $1.36 billion and adjusted operating loss of $115 million for the full-year 2023. This primarily incorporates stronger top line outperformance during the first quarter as we intend on shifting some expenses that we had tended for the first quarter to later in the year. We remain focused on operating with efficiency in 2023, driving operating leverage across hiring, sales and marketing, and corporate overhead. For the full year, we continue to expect margin improvement year-over-year on both an adjusted EBITDA, and adjusted operating income basis. Shifting to share based compensation. Last year, in the second quarter, Our share based compensation expenses increased by $47 million quarter-over-quarter when excluding a one-time SBC expense of $66 million related to the acquisition of Afterpay recognized in the first quarter of 2022. We expect a similar quarter-over-quarter increase in the second quarter of this year. This remains an area on which we are focused and expect to drive greater leverage over time. I'll now turn it back to the operator to start the Q&A portion of the call.