Now I'd like to turn the call over to the CEO of Concrete Pumping Holdings, Bruce Young. Bruce? Thank you, Cody, and good afternoon, everyone. In the fourth quarter, our results continued to demonstrate the durability of our operating model and the benefit of our diversified platform. Despite a challenging macroeconomic backdrop, US concrete pumping volumes in the fourth quarter remained stable in the commercial market. The continued improvement in infrastructure was offset by lower homebuilding volume and softer residential construction markets. Our Eco Pan Waste Management Services segment again delivered steady year-over-year growth, underscoring the benefits of our diversified platform. In addition, our disciplined approach to cost management, fleet efficiency, and strategic pricing played an important role in top-line pressure and supporting profitability. Turning to specific comments by segment within our U.S. Pumping business, we continue to experience year-over-year improvement in publicly funded infrastructure work, including road, bridge, and education projects. Infrastructure projects are 25% of our US concrete pumping revenue during fiscal 2025, and our national footprint remains an advantage as previously allocated federal and state funding moves into proactive project starts. In the commercial end market, which was 47% of our US concrete pumping revenue, the demand environment in heavy commercial construction improved through the year in our key geographies, and this is underpinned by expansion in data center, chip plant, and large warehouse activity. Light commercial activity was softer year-over-year as construction volumes remained more sensitive to interest rate pressure and tariff-related uncertainty. Moving on to the residential end market, affordability constraints from higher interest rates continue to cause downward pressure on homebuilding demand volumes, and year-over-year revenue was lower in this end despite pricing being relatively stable. Our residential end market mix was at 29% of total revenue on a trailing twelve-month basis. We expect that moderating mortgage rates will encourage a steady path towards normalization to address this structural supply-demand imbalance in housing. We expect this will support medium to long-term home building activity, and we believe the Federal Reserve's path to interest rate reduction should provide incremental support to this end market's growth over time. Moving to our UK operations, commercial construction activity remains subdued as elevated interest rates and economic uncertainty continue to weigh on volumes. However, infrastructure remains resilient in the UK, particularly in energy projects and continued growth in HS2 rail construction, which still has a long construction runway remaining to project completion. In our US concrete waste management business, we continue to increase revenue due to both organic volume and pricing growth, even as the broader US construction markets remain challenged. I would like to pivot to 2026 in our capital investment plans, particularly surrounding an upcoming change with tighter emission standards that we believe will impact the broader construction industry. As a company focused on sustainable growth and long-term shareholder value, we are proactively accelerating a $22 million investment from fiscal 2027 into fiscal 2026 in our US concrete pumping and Eco Pan fleet in advance of the upcoming 2027 stricter NOx emission standards. For those of you who are unaware of what this means, NOx refers to nitrogen oxides, which are emissions produced by diesel engines and regulated due to their impact on air quality. The upcoming 2027 standards that are expected to go into effect January 1, 2027, will significantly tighten allowable NOx emission levels for new heavy-duty equipment. For fleet operators like Concrete Pumping Holdings, these standards affect the cost, design, reliability, and availability of new OEM equipment and will increasingly influence customer preferences on job site requirements. The decision to accelerate equipment purchases is based on a couple of key considerations, navigating the expected disruptions from first-generation truck technologies and anticipated truck price increases in 2027 driven by incremental OEM production costs. From an operational standpoint, we have experienced this change in emission regulations before, in transitioning heavy construction equipment to meet modern NOx emission standards is far more complex than simply replacing an engine or adding emissions hardware. These changes fundamentally alter how the equipment behaves in real-world conditions. In the last engine emissions change, it took several years to achieve an acceptable standard. This pull forward of a significant portion of fiscal year 2027 investment will reduce replacement CapEx expenditures in fiscal year 2027 and aligns with our capital allocation roadmap to allow for a smooth transition under new regulations to improve the company's competitive positioning. I will now let Iain address our financial results in more detail before I return to provide some concluding remarks. Iain?