Thank you, Steven. Welcome to Alpha and Omega's fiscal Q2 earnings call. I will begin with a high-level overview of our results and then jump into segment details. We delivered fiscal Q2 revenue and EPS results in line with our guidance. Revenue was $173.2 million. Non-GAAP gross margin was 24.2%. Non-GAAP EPS was $0.09. While we saw seasonal to sequential declines in fiscal Q2 from each of our major segments, the communications and industrial segments outperformed our initial forecast, and we saw sequential growth in graphics cards, quick chargers, PC, desktops, and power tools. These increases were offset by seasonal declines in gaming, notebooks, tablets, and wearables. With the December quarter now complete, we can reflect on our performance in calendar 2024, where AOS revenue increased 4.1% year-over-year. While this modest overall growth might not seem overwhelming, the recovery in our segment suggests the inventory correction is clearly behind us. Further, a closer examination by segment validates AOS's strategic shift from a component supplier to a total solutions provider. This transition is enabling us to tap into new opportunities, gain market share, and increase BOM content. Most notably, our computing and communications segments each grew more than 25% in calendar 2024, driven by market share gains and BOM content growth in motherboards, AI, graphics cards, and tablets. In smartphones, our battery PCM product line contributed the largest incremental dollar growth to the company in calendar year 2024. We now believe AOS is the industry leader in smartphone battery PCM. We also saw strong growth in wearables and e-mobility in calendar 2024, further proving our ability to build on existing customer relationships while broadening into new and adjacent markets. The primary headwinds to calendar 2024 growth were mostly concentrated in gaming and quick chargers, yet both markets have now digested excess inventories and returned to growth in the past few quarters. As we look ahead, we are delivering on our commitments and advancing our transformation from a component supplier to a total solutions provider. Our strategic focus is to go deeper by leveraging strengths in high-performance silicon, packaging, and intelligent ICs. Our goal is to leverage premier customer relationships to expand market share and increase BOM content with a broader portfolio. With that, let me now cover our segment results and provide some guidance by segment for the next quarter. Starting with computing, December quarter revenue was up 6% year-over-year, but down slightly negative 0.5% sequentially and represented 43.9% of total revenue. These results were better than typical seasonality, but slightly worse than our original expectation for slight sequential growth. We saw relative strength from PC desktops and graphics cards offset by the seasonal decline in notebooks and tablets. Servers in AI and celebrated cards were also softer as the industry prepares for the next platform transition. We continue to see a good opportunity in advanced computing, and we are encouraged by the progress we had made thus far. Within AI for large data centers, we are a contender in the middle stages of the design and phase, and we see potential for these products to contribute to revenue in the middle of the calendar year. On graphics cards, the next generation platform is ramping up to mass production. With this new platform, we expect BOM content to increase as more power stage ICs paired with our controller are being used to power the GPU. Looking forward into the March quarter, the computing segment will likely decline due to seasonality, however, the PC market is expected to be flat as tariff uncertainty is leading to demand pull-ins with PC makers. Turning to the consumer segment, December revenue was down 3.9% year-over-year and down 28.8% sequentially and represented 13% of total revenue. The results were in line with our forecast driven by seasonality in gaming and home appliances, as well as a pullback in wearables following a record level achieved in the third calendar quarter. As a reminder, we don't expect gaming to return to meaningful growth until the customer transitions to the next platform. For the March quarter, we forecast a low single-digit sequential decline in the consumer segment driven by continued seasonality in gaming, TVs, and softness in home appliances. Next, let's discuss the communication segment. Revenue in the December quarter was up 14.5% year-over-year, but down 6.4% sequentially and represented 19.2% of total revenue. These results were above our initial expectations for a double-digit sequential decline as broad-based demand from our Tier 1 U.S. smartphone customer and China OEMs moderated only slightly, while Korea saw an increase in preparation for product launches in the first calendar quarter. We believe the better-than-expected results are due to a combination of market share gains, a mixed shift to higher-end phones in China, and generally higher charging currents driving increased BOM content. Looking ahead, we anticipate a low-teen sequential decline in the March quarter for the communication segment mostly due to seasonality. Now, let's talk about our last segment, Power Supply and Industrial, which accounted for 20.2% of total revenue and was flat year-over-year and up 9.6% sequentially. The results were ahead of our forecast for low single-digit sequential growth driven by seasonal strength in quick chargers as well as an increase in power tools. Demand also held relatively steady quarter-over-quarter in AC-DC power supplies and e-mobility. As we stated before, we see additional opportunities in 2025 for quick chargers due to increased BOM content driven by higher charging currents. Further, we are leveraging relationships in Taiwan to partner on DC stands for server racks. For the March quarter, we expect a low teen sequential decline for the Power Supply and Industrial segment, primarily driven by seasonal decline in quick chargers. This decline will be partially offset by some sequential growth in e-mobility and AC-DC power supplies. In closing, December quarter revenue was slightly ahead of our expectations while gross margin was a bit softer. The continued year-over-year revenue growth confirms the inventory corrections we experienced over the past year are complete. Seasonality has returned and new markets like AI and advanced computing are emerging. As we look ahead to 2025, visibility remains limited and the first quarter is typically affected by seasonal softness. The subdued market environment will likely pressure pricing and wind down of licensing and engineering revenue will further impact gross margin. We expect both revenue and margin to recover beyond the March quarter with incremental growth likely from smartphones, graphics cards and AI. AOS is well-positioned for growth, supported by our advanced technology, a broad product range and a premier customer base across the various industries. Strategic initiatives over the past few years are yielding results with successful design integration of controllers and power stages into PCs, graphics cards and AI applications. We are poised to accelerate this expansion, capturing new opportunities and increasing our BOM content. Power management remains at the core of major industry trends, including AI, digitalization, connectivity and electrification, critical to achieving a low carbon sustainable future. We anticipate continued growth driven by advanced computing and data centers, AI integration in PCs and smartphones and higher charging currents in smartphones. Beyond computing and communications, we see many opportunities in solar, motors and e-mobility, gaming, home appliances and power tools. With that, I will now turn the call over to Yifan for a discussion of our fiscal second quarter financial results and our outlook for the next quarter. Yifan?