Thank you, John-Davis. I'm pleased to welcome the listeners to the Battalion Oil Fourth Quarter 2019 Earnings Call and our first investor update as Battalion Oil Corporation. Admittedly, it's been a long time since we've communicated to the market, and I assure you that truly transformational change has occurred here. I'm proud of what we've done over the last few months, and I hope that after reviewing these milestones, you'll understand why. I have to start by first acknowledging that the industry as a whole is currently facing 2 significant headwinds. First, the COVID-19 virus; and second, an all-out oil price war aimed at the U.S. shale industry. Battalion's business continuity plan allows us to administer the business 100% remotely. That's including processing payments and invoices to all stakeholders that includes vendors, mineral owners and our workforce. We recognize that we work in an industry critical to the national interest, and we don't take that responsibility lightly. We adhere to all CDC guidelines, and we're focused on keeping our workforce safe and healthy. While the workforce for our Houston-based employees may lend itself to new technologies and working remotely, our field operations are a little more nuanced. We've made arrangements to create adequate physical space among our field staff and are fortunate that the population density out in the field is relatively low anyway. You'll hear me elaborate more on EH&S later on. But for now, I'll emphasize that safety is one of our core values. Therefore, we're ensuring the continuity of our in-person safety meetings, which we require multiple times per day, by breaking teams in the groups of fewer than 10 people and increasing the reliance on radio communications as necessary. We really do value the health and safety of our workforce. In dealing with the price war facing our industry, we are prepared to and have, in many cases, reacted swiftly. Most of the people on this team have managed through some type of downturn throughout the course of their careers. These experiences have taught us to be more nimble and aware of the signs of a slowing market. Due to all of the work we've done over the last few months, we're not only in a position to endure this downturn, we're prepared to be opportunistic with a balance sheet-friendly M&A. Ragan will walk through fourth quarter highlights in more detail, some of which include ending 2019 with a net debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 1.54x. We find ourselves in this position due to substantial realized cost savings, operational efficiencies and the solid hedge position that we've built up over the last few months. Our year-end PDP volume is hedged 94% in the first year of our 3-year hedge book, with a floor of over $56 a barrel in 2020 using only plain vanilla swaps and 2-way collars. I'm proud that everything we've done together over the last several months affords us security and confidence as we face uncertainty. In today's presentation, we want you to walk away with the same impression that we had on this asset and on why this investment made sense when we were looking for our next opportunity and why it makes as much sense today as it ever has. We'll try to answer the question of why. Why this company, why Battalion Oil Corporation, why these assets on the Delaware Basin? And why now? In a nutshell, this team has the breadth of experience dealing with challenging acreage positions and in challenging markets. We have the expertise to drive down cost and improve performance. These assets are strong. We're developing an overpressured oily reservoir that has the potential to compete with Tier 1 acreage across the Permian. And that might come as a surprise from a company that just went through bankruptcy, but it's true, and we aim to explain why. The majority of the acreage is already held and requires minimal activity going forward, providing a more flexible foundation to adapt to the market conditions. We feel like the time to take advantage of the investment opportunity is now. We've been successful realizing values for companies in the past by getting into positions when the market is distressed. We look for opportunities to get into the business when others are trying to get out. This contrarian view, in my opinion, avails itself to opportunity. The time to get into this business is not when oil is trading at $100 a barrel or acreage multiples are excessive. We create value by focusing on the assets we already have without betting on oil prices or type curve improvements and without relying on leverage to generate growth. There are a number of things we've done to further strengthen our financial position. We've consolidated our Denver and Houston offices into 1 office located in Houston. We've reduced our G&A by roughly 45%, and we've integrated a strong technical team that continues to deliver repeatable results, reducing well costs by 32% in less than 6 months without compromising well performance. We've created an ESG task force to evaluate awareness in our organization. We've secured flow assurance for sour gas production in Monument Draw and plan to double treating capacity yet again by the end of Q1 2020. We expect this to service our production over the next couple of years under a 1-rig development scenario. We've reduced LOE by almost 30% across all of our operations, and last but definitely not least, we received our acid gas injection well permit that will allow us to treat our gas much more economically, will be a strong platform for significant responsible growth in the future. We're now operating under a new strategy with a new Board and a newly integrated team. It only seems fitting that when we relisted on the New York Stock Exchange American on February 20, we did sell under a different name, Battalion Oil Corporation. This truly is a new company. In 2019, despite everything that this company went through, we were still able to generate annual oil production growth of 6% to 10,356 barrels of oil per day or 11,489 barrels of oil per day in the fourth quarter. We reduced our fourth quarter operating cost to $18.28 per BOE versus $36.98 per BOE for the fourth quarter of 2018, that's a 50% improvement. We decreased our adjusted G&A unit cost by 37% to $3.22 per BOE from $5.08 per BOE in the same quarter of the previous year. On Slide 4, I just want to make a few points. First, all of the assets Halcón owned before becoming a pure-play Permian operator, they were shed by the end of 2016, so the asset base was totally different long before we arrived. Second, the entity was accustomed to a different business strategy historically than today. The successes of the first phase of the shale revolution, the land grab, the buy-and-flip mentality doesn't lend itself to the evolving dynamics of asset development. Good assets require a calculated plan and a tremendous coordination to fully realize the NAV. Halcón managed to acquire great acreage, but overcapitalized the asset early on and ran out of liquidity to address the increasing H2S issues for Monument Draw. We now have the benefit of hindsight from which to study the asset's development history and identify clear drivers of value going forward. The Battalion team takes more of a walk before you run approach. After drilling over 400 wells in the basin and a history of operating prolific unconventional basins across Texas and Louisiana, we appreciate the importance of fully understanding the reservoir before sanctioning a full-scale development program. Integrity is another core value of ours, and we want to deliver on what we say we're going to do. That means we need to prove to ourselves that we can create the necessary changes to drive value before we move into a full development mode. I'm pleased to be joined at Battalion by my colleagues and friends, Ragan and Danny, both of whom I worked with at Ajax Resources, which was a private equity-backed E&P company that we sold to Diamondback back in October of 2018. In searching for our next venture, we began evaluating Halcón assets and identified key drivers of value that we felt had merit. The operating expenses including G&A were too high. The well costs were too high. There wasn't enough treating capacity for H2S. The acreage has significant running room with multiple productive intervals that were not being tested or delineated, and a significant portion of the acreage is in an overpressured oily reservoir. We believe we excel at solving these problems and, therefore, have a good shot at generating value, even if we [ aren't ] ultimately successful at all of the above. The strategy and focus of Battalion was to create value organically. We believe we have a strong asset base and an experienced leadership team that understands execution, capital discipline and accountability. This is not the first time we've had to find opportunity on the basin hedges where creating efficiencies was imperative to driving values for the investor. In our minds, it's not just about cutting costs, but also tying our subsurface knowledge to our operations to not only improve well performance but also improve execution. Of course, we know it makes sense right now to grow through consolidation, but only if it makes sense from a balance sheet standpoint. The benefit that we have over others in our space is that if we can't find the right M&A value, we have our existing assets to create value. Our assets are focused on the Delaware Basin with 52,000 acre position from 30 co-located contiguous operating areas that allow for efficient long lateral development. The acreage is well held, requires very little continuous activity or future capital. Hackberry, for instance, is 95% held by production, while Monument Draw and West Quito require only 3 wells every year to hold both areas. Our capital program continues to be concentrated in Monument Draw, which is not uncommon for IP30s to be in the 1,500 to 2,000 BOE per day range with high oil content with the recent well results over 3,000 BOE per day in the area. With the reduction in CapEx that Danny will review in more detail, we're excited about the prospects of breakevens landing somewhere in the high 20s. West Quito has the potential to compete for capital with Monument Draw in the very near future. In the southern portion of West Quito, where most of the previous development took place, we recently brought on 2 new wells that, after 4 months of production, are outperforming the type curve by over 70%. If we can continue to drive costs out of the system, these wells will look very attractive. In the northern portion of West Quito, where oil percentages tend to be higher, we're working to try to block up this acreage to allow more efficient operations of 10,000-foot laterals. Today, we can only drill 5,000-foot laterals. We recently completed a stand-alone well in this area and excited to see the results. Hackberry has the most producing wells and, fortunately, the lowest decline. At an annual decline rate of less than 20%, this is a great cash flow asset for us. If you turn to Slide 7, we want to show you actual data from our relevant experiences together in the Permian and how significantly we affected change in a short period of time. This serves as the basis for our enthusiasm for Permian development. One thing I'll say about these results, and then I'll turn it over to Danny, is not only did the results get better, but in every instance, they became repeatable.