Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. I appreciate this opportunity to share reflections on the year and offer some perspective on the strategic position and momentum of our company as we enter into 2026. Joining me today is Alerus CFO, Alan Villalon; COO, Karin Taylor; Chief Banking Revenue Officer, Jim Collins; and Alerus Chief Retirement Services Officer, Forrest Wilson. 2025 was a milestone year for Alerus in which we demonstrated not only strong core financial performance but significant execution of major strategic initiatives that position the company for sustainable organic growth and a return to top-tier profitability and performance. I'm incredibly proud of what our team accomplished, not just for the financial results, including posting a core ROA of 1.62% this quarter, but for the collaborative efforts to accomplish these initiatives during the year. It is evident through our ability to set goals, hold each other accountable, and exceed expectations that the leadership team and the talent throughout this company are exceptionally strong and deep. One of the most notable accomplishments of 2025 was delivering results well above our committed targets, both financial and non-financial, in our first full year of operating as a combined organization with Home Federal. We delivered an adjusted ROA of 1.35% and an adjusted efficiency ratio of 64.45%. In addition to a net retention rate of deposits close to 95%, we achieved critical retention of key talent throughout the organization. These results solidify our integration capabilities of aligning people, systems, resources, and culture quickly and effectively. Our focus in 2025 was to continue to enhance our commercial bank and to sustainably improve returns while focusing on our long-term strategy. In the back half of the year, we executed a purposeful deleveraging plan, actively managing loan paydowns and pruning marginal credits to strengthen our balance sheet and improve our flexibility. As we saw success in these initiatives, we took disciplined steps to sell our legacy low-yielding available-for-sale securities portfolio. This balance sheet repositioning improved our earnings power going forward, reduced our AOCI volatility, enhanced capital generation capacity, and gave us greater flexibility for lending in our markets. The deliberate steps we took position Alerus for stronger performance and tangible book value growth in 2026 and beyond, demonstrating our commitment to creating long-term sustainable value for our clients, our communities, and our shareholders. On the banking side, we saw a steady build of momentum throughout 2025, especially in the second half of the year. Excluding the purposeful reductions in CRE, the targeted loan sales, and our selective managing of renewals, organic loan growth for the year would have been closer to mid-single digits. Of note, our strategic entry into the mid-market C&I space gained real traction as we moved through the year, and we enter 2026 with a strong pipeline. Organic core deposit growth also picked up momentum in the back half of the year, with the focus shifting from retention as the team members worked through the deposit system conversion. We're seeing some nice large opportunities for mid-market and government not-for-profit treasury management in early 2026, which should enhance our deposit growth through the year. From a margin perspective, strong pricing discipline on both sides of the balance sheet throughout the organization drove the core NIM higher. Nonperforming loans ticked up higher with the migration of an acquired purchase participation that was previously identified as a problem loan. This is a multifamily property in the Twin Cities with a 15% reserve, and it should resolve relatively quickly. Our largest non-performing exposure continues to be a large multifamily loan in the Twin Cities, with a book balance of approximately $32 million. This property now has multiple offers and is currently 74% leased. We are reserved at about 17% and continue to expect resolution by midyear. Leading credit indicators showed meaningful improvement over 2025, including a 30% reduction in criticized asset levels. While we had another quarter of net recoveries and a slight reserve release, the allowance for loan losses remained robust at 1.53% of total loans. In addition, capital accretion boosted the TCE ratio to 8.72%, putting the balance sheet in a strong position for organic loan growth. Moving on to our ultimate differentiator, our fee income businesses, where we grew core revenues 7% year over year. Although our most recent acquisitions have been strategic bank additions in key markets like Rochester, Minnesota, and Phoenix, Arizona, we have maintained fee income at over 40% of total revenues, almost three times the average of most financial institutions. Notably, we ended the year with assets in our retirement and wealth divisions at nearly $50 billion, or 10 times the assets in our banking division. Our retirement division delivered strong results, including robust sales, continued better-than-industry client retention, and growth in plans and participants. We ended 2025 with the strongest revenue momentum this division has seen. Momentum, we believe, will continue into 2026 and beyond. The retirement business remains integral to our overall success, providing over a quarter of the company's funding and serving as a powerful internal source of wealth management opportunities. In 2025, we continued to expand our national presence through partnerships, anchored in our distinguished reputation for outstanding client service. As the twenty-fifth largest provider in the country and with a new leadership team in place, we will continue to invest in technology and AI to enhance scalability and improve margins. During the year, we successfully converted our entire wealth business onto a new system, achieving 100% client retention, thanks to excellent execution by our support team and the high-touch service delivered by our wealth advisors. This reinvestment strengthens our foundation and positions us to advance our strategic plan to double the number of advisors across the Alerus franchise, with the aspirational goal of growing our wealth assets at the same pace as our banking assets. Earlier this month, we finalized the first step in building our next-generation team with the selection of our new wealth management leader, an experienced professional with deep expertise in wealth, trust, and institutional advisory, and a proven ability to recruit talent and drive key strategic initiatives. On a core and reported basis, we saw strong operating leverage even as we modernized our systems, implemented new core platforms, and strengthened our digital capabilities. While we produced record levels of sales throughout many of our business lines, we did this all while managing our headcount down over 6% from its peak in October 2024. These upgrades allow us to move faster, create more consistency in client experience, and operate with greater scalability. They also ensure we are building a future-ready organization, one that is ready to embed AI and automation where it improves quality, efficiency, and client insights. CET1 capital levels ended the year at 10.28%, up from 9.91% a year ago, giving us ample flexibility to support growth, sustain our dividend, and selectively pursue opportunities. Our primary focus remains on organic growth and strategic hiring as we continue to see meaningful talent and market share opportunities stemming from recent M&A disruption in the Twin Cities. As the second-largest locally led financial institution in the market, with $55 billion in banking, wealth, and retirement assets, nearly $300 million in adjusted revenue, and over $600 million in market cap, Alerus is well-positioned to capture this momentum. Over the past several years, we have successfully lifted out high-performing teams and professionals, leveraging our deep expertise in C&I, private banking, and wealth management. Strong synergies across these business lines, combined with our expanding physical and brand presence in the Twin Cities, position us to continue attracting top talent, growing C&I relationships, and serving more high-net-worth clients. As we enter 2026, we do so from a position of strength and are set for continued momentum. We have a unified and clearly defined strategy, a modernized operating environment, a de-risked future-ready balance sheet, durable diversified revenue engines across banking, wealth, and retirement, strong capital and liquidity, a deep leadership team built for the next chapter, and a culture centered on accountability to each other, our shareholders, our clients, and our communities. We expect to continue generating positive core operating leverage, expanding tangible book value, and delivering top-tier long-term returns. The work we did in 2025 integrating, modernizing, de-risking, and aligning creates the conditions for stronger and more consistent performance in the years ahead. And with that, I will hand it over to Alan Villalon.