Thank you, Roger. As Roger has highlighted, although it was not a modest but decent quarter results came in at or above guidance and we expect further strengthening in the coming quarters. The macroeconomic environment continues to provide market volatility which translates to a level of uncertainty in the semiconductor industry. The demand for Memory remains soft while excess inventories are being brought down in the supply chain and some of the second half Memory demand risk that we discussed last quarter has meanwhile materialized and resulted in system push-outs this year into 2020. This Memory weakness has been compensated by strengthening of Logic demand such that our review of 2019 total sales remains unchanged. As such, we expect 2019 to be a growth year with sales and profitability increasing throughout 2019. In Memory, the market continues to digest the high level of capacity additions put in place over the past few years. The digestion started last year was exacerbated by the decelerating macroeconomic growth. This will likely extend throughout most of this year. Based on lower demand from our Memory customers, we now see our Memory sales down around 30% year-on-year versus 20% indicated last quarter. As discussed last quarter, we see two contributing components of Memory demand this year. We have characterized one as strategic which we expect will happen largely independent of market conditions and this includes both early Chinese domestic Memory ramp and EUV for DRAM. This component is valued at approximately €1 billion which we believe has low risk of push-outs. The second is the bit supply component which we previously indicated as having a higher risk. And if you remove the strategic components from our estimated 2019 Memory demand, we get a lithography spent on Memory bit supply of around €2.1 billion which is around 45% lower than the comparable spent in 2018. And as we have already shipped around €1.2 billion to Memory bit supply in the first half of the year, this leaves around €900 million in the second half of the year targeted for Memory bit supply which has an inherently higher risk profile than the strategic investments in Memory. On the positive side though, our Memory customers continue to indicate they are making significant reductions in wafer output to an extent we haven’t seen in previous downturns. This reduction in spent and lower wafer output will help in reaching a more normalized supply/demand balance. Logic will clearly be our growth driver in 2019 but the majority of the demand linked to new technology transitions and advanced node additions. We are seeing increased demand from our customers driven by accelerated ramp of 7 nanometer node and beyond supporting amongst others the introduction of 5G technology. With this strengthening, we now expect our Logic business to be up around 65% for the year relative to last year, which is 15 percentage points up from the 50% that we communicated last quarter. Along with increased system demand in the second half, we also expect stronger demand for field upgrades which translates to low-single digit percentage growth of Installed Base Management revenue. Now let me turn to the ASML product side and update you on our EUV business. In EUV, we recently demonstrated more than 170 wafers per hour on our first NXE:3400C system. We have also run more than 2,000 wafers per day under customer memory production conditions and this is a significant milestone and it confirms the required capability for memory production which means that our focus will be on stability and uptime to secure our customers’ ramp plans. We plan to ship the first NXE:3400C system in Q3 with a higher number of C systems planned in Q4. As Roger mentioned, we shipped seven systems in Q2, one more than guided and received 10 orders. As a confirmation of the potential of the NXE:3400C for cost effective, high volume memory production, we received a number of EUV orders this quarter for systems slated for use in memory. Customers are aggressively bringing new technology to the market which reflects on the solid demand for 30 systems this year. Demand for NXE:3400C systems has proven to be high. Our 2019 shipment plan is significantly skewed towards the second half of the year and to Q4 specifically. Next to the back loaded plan, we’re also transitioning to a new scanner model, like I said earlier the 3400C which suppliers need to ramp their production. Taking both of these into account, there is a risk of a few systems planned for Q4 moving into the first weeks of 2020. However, this risk has been taken into account in our comments regarding our full year 2019 sales outlook. In any case, the strong demand for NXE:3400C as well as the continued progress in the ramp up of our production capacity is clear. In summary, despite uncertainty in the current environment, we continue to see a stronger second half with the strengthening of both sales and profitability quarter-on-quarter. Logic will be the primary driver of growth this year and demand has further strengthened from last quarter as customers accelerate the ramp of their advanced nodes. Memory demand has more uncertainty and has further weakened since last quarter. However, as mentioned before, the stronger Logic demand compensates for the weaker Memory demand. And in total, our overall sales outlook for the year, as I mentioned before, remains unchanged and we expect 2019 to be another year of growth. With that, we will be happy to take your questions.