Thank you, Yosef, and good morning, everyone. Looking at our second quarter results. Global revenue in the second quarter was $143.7 million compared to $180.3 million in the second quarter of last year, a decrease of 20.3%. On a constant currency basis, second quarter revenue was down 18.4% mainly due to lower volume partially offset by the benefit of previously enacted pricing actions. The 1.9% difference between U.S. dollar revenue and constant currency revenues reflects the impact of the stronger U.S. dollar against our generated revenues in all markets outside of the U.S. I will note that our second quarter 2023 revenues reflect two factors. One is the impact of the challenging prior year comparisons during which we realized a number of price increases in a period of strong market activity. The other factor is the impact of the residential sales activity which slowed down commencing in the second half of 2022. The result of that slowdown is now more pronounced in our results. Therefore, second quarter revenues were impacted by softer global market conditions and the competitive landscape of our products. Market pressure was more severe in the residential renovation and remodeling channels in North America and with destocking activity at many third-party distributors. In the U.S., sales were down 25.4% mainly tied to softer residential end markets, particularly through third-party distributors. Higher sales with big box customers and better performance in our commercial business were positive for the quarter. In our other large markets, Canada sales were off about 15.3% on a constant currency basis, experiencing similar dynamics as the U.S. Australia fared relatively better with sales down roughly 5.3% on a constant currency basis, owing to less severe market pressure. Looking at our second quarter P&L performance. I will start with gross margin where we saw a significant drop-off in the second quarter, largely related to several factors, many of which are temporary factors as I will discuss. Our gross margin was 8.3% for the quarter. Adjusted gross margin rose 9.6% compared to 26.4% in the prior year quarter and 19.7% in the first quarter of 2023. While lower revenues were certainly a pain point in our margin for the quarter, when factoring out a number of other nontypical and we believe transitory impact during the quarter, we estimate our gross margin was around 15%. As reported, the year-over-year difference in gross margin reflects several factors. The first factor is the activity at our plant including those mentioned by us, accounting for roughly 510 basis points for the margin decline. We experienced lower fixed cost absorption, resulting in higher manufacturing unit costs. Lower productivity related to closing of the Sdot-Yam plant was also a factor. In addition, as Yosef also mentioned, we invested heavily in reengineering existing collections, which consumed a significant amount of resources and resulted in our throughput and margins coming under pressure in Israel. Our teams work tirelessly to develop engineer test, refine and attain the capability to manufacture those products previously produced in this Sdot-Yam plant as well as those aimed to meet evolving Australian regulation at our Bar-Lev facility in Israel. We saw reduced throughput and higher manufacturing unit costs due to this mix shift. Second factor is concerning inventories. We were impacted on two fronts. First, a large portion of the units sold during the quarter were from our higher cost inventory on hand at the beginning of the year, combined with an inventory write-down during the quarter. These two factors represented 11% of the gross margin difference. These factors were partially offset by previously enacted pricing actions and the benefit from lower shipping costs. We are confident that many of these margin challenges are addressable and our gross margin should improve during the second half of 2023 as we gain additional efficiencies from our restructuring efforts and the wind down of higher cost inventory. We also expect to benefit from lower raw material and sea freight expenses compared to last year. Operating expenses in the second quarter were $58.8 million, compared to $41.2 million in the prior year quarter and included an impairment and restructuring expense of $23.6 million related to the Dorian plant closure. Excluding the legal settlements and loss contingencies and the expenses related to the planned closure, adjusted operating expenses were 24.3% of revenue compared to 22.1% in the prior year quarter. Adjusted EBITDA in the second quarter was a loss of $13.4 million compared to adjusted EBITDA of $17.1 million in the prior year quarter. The difference primarily reflects lower operating income. Turning to our balance sheet. Caesarstone balance sheet as of June 30, 2023, included cash, cash equivalents and short-term bank deposits and short-term marketable securities of $57.3 million with a total debt to financial institutions of $8.3 million. We generated during the quarter positive cash flow from operations of $17.2 million mainly driven by our inventory reduction efforts. This compared to cash used in the amount of $4.5 million in the second quarter of 2022. During the quarter, we paid down our lines of credit from Israeli banks and ended the quarter with full availability on our lines of credit. Our net cash position as of June 30, 2023, was $49 million compared to $33.3 million as of March 31, 2023. And $28.2 million as of December 31, 2022. Before turning to our outlook, the Sdot-Yam plant closure has gone as planned overall. The plant closed in May and costs associated with the closure totaled to $23.6 million during the quarter. The majority of that was related to the write-down on a long-term noncancelable lease agreement related to the facility with a term ending in 2032. We also incurred cash costs of $2.6 million. We now expect the total cash cost related to operations to come within a narrower band of $5 million to $7 million, which we estimate to incur by mid-2024. As a result of the facility closure, as mentioned also in the previous call, we expect to realize annualized savings of approximately $10 million to $15 million. Above and beyond those savings, we are in the process of accepting bids to sublet portions of the noncancelable lease agreement that I've mentioned earlier. The onetime die-down on the lease is in part based on our estimates of our ability to sublet part of the sodium property. We expect that the remaining costs associated with the lease will be increasingly offset by sub leases over time. I will mention again that cash received from executing subleases would represent cash savings above and beyond our anticipated $10 million to $15 million of annualized cost savings. In regards to our outlook, we are reiterating our outlook for the full year of 2023 to generate positive cash flow from operations and to end the year with an improved net cash position. This is based on inventory reductions and other working capital improvements, along with cost optimization efforts. Additionally, we anticipate significant improvement in adjusted EBITDA in the second half of 2023 compared to the first half of the year. Adjusted EBITDA should step up sequentially through year-end, resulting in third quarter better than the second quarter and the fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA to show additional improvements. While revenues are likely to remain pressured through year-end, we base our assumption for significant sequential improvement in the second half adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin on several factors. We have already sold through most of our higher cost inventory, the operational investments that we have made to develop and reengineer products are largely behind us. The closure of the Sdot-Yam facility in May will give us a full quarter of higher asset utilization on remaining assets. Increasing portion of our products will be produced at our third-party manufacturers in Far East. And finally, we will start benefiting from lower shipping costs and raw material prices that have eased over the last few months, expected to have a positive impact in the third quarter and more evident in the fourth quarter of 2023. In summary, we are prioritizing our focus on taking actions that will make Caesarstone, a more regional company that produce stronger cash flow as we look to drive long-term value for our shareholders. With that, we are now ready to open the call for questions.