Thank you, Chase. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us. First, I'd like to provide a quick outline for today's call. I will start with our strong fourth quarter and full year results, highlight key awards and discuss the macro environment. Following this, I will walk through the progress we are making as we further scale our power systems portfolio and capture growing demand in this space. I will then hand it over to Ahmed, who will present an overview of our financial results, followed by an update on the progress we are making on Chart integration planning. To conclude, I will summarize the main points before we open the line for questions. Let us now turn to Slide 4. We continued to execute at a high level, delivering another quarter of strong results. Adjusted EBITDA totaled $1.34 billion, surpassing the midpoint of our guidance range and contributing to a record full year adjusted EBITDA of $4.83 billion. This achievement demonstrates sustained momentum from our Business System and ongoing positive performance in Industrial & Energy Technology, which more than offset continued macro-driven softness in Oilfield Services & Equipment. Adjusted earnings per share rose to $0.78, resulting in a full year adjusted EPS of $2.60, a 10% increase from 2024. Adjusted EBITDA margins for the fourth quarter rose 30 basis points year-over-year to a record 18.1%. While OFSE margins declined due to prevailing market conditions, IET margins increased by 160 basis points to 20%. For the full year, company adjusted EBITDA margins increased by 90 basis points to a record of 17.4%. OFSE margins remained resilient even though revenue declined by 8%, while IET margins demonstrated another year of meaningful expansion, increasing 170 basis points to a historical high of 18.5%. Turning to orders. IET delivered strong fourth quarter order bookings of $4 billion, contributing to a record full year total of $14.9 billion, exceeding the high end of our guidance range. For the second consecutive year, non-LNG equipment orders represented approximately 85% of total IET orders. This performance highlights the end-market diversity and versatility of our IET portfolio, led by growth in power generation and New Energy alongside continued strength in energy infrastructure and LNG. IET achieved a record backlog of $32.4 billion at year-end, while book-to-bill exceeded 1x. During the fourth quarter, we generated robust free cash flow of $1.3 billion, contributing to a record annual free cash flow of $2.7 billion. This represents a free cash flow conversion rate of 57% in 2025, above our 45% to 50% target range. This strong performance was driven by enhanced working capital efficiency and higher customer down payments, which contributed to free cash flow for the year exceeding expectations. Now turning to Slide 5. As I highlighted, we maintained robust order momentum in IET throughout 2025. In LNG, we delivered another strong quarter of equipment orders, providing critical liquefaction technology for Train 5 at NextDecade's Rio Grande LNG facility and Commonwealth LNG's export terminal. In 2025, we booked $2.3 billion of LNG equipment orders. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect similar levels of LNG awards, including material orders outside of the U.S. Building on these achievements, we are further strengthening the durability of our life cycle model through major aftermarket service awards. This includes long-term service agreements for Cheniere’s Corpus Christi Trains 8 and 9 as well as iCenter remote monitoring and diagnostics for NextDecade's Rio Grande Trains 1, 2 and 3. In power systems, orders increased significantly to $2.5 billion in 2025, including $1 billion tied to data center applications, reflecting accelerating demand and growing customer confidence in our solutions. Capitalizing on this strong momentum in power systems, 2025 marked a milestone year for our NovaLT industrial gas turbines, booking approximately 2 gigawatts of orders across oil and gas, industrial and data center markets. In addition, during the fourth quarter, we secured a large slot reservation agreement for approximately 1 gigawatt of NovaLT capacity to support data center applications, which we expect to convert into a firm order in 2026. Additionally, our power systems business secured a major contract to supply over 40 BRUSH generators for gas-fired utility-scale power plants, which will collectively deliver approximately 7 gigawatts of reliable power and enhance grid resilience, highlighting the critical role our technologies play in strengthening U.S. energy infrastructure. We also continue to capture synergy opportunities across our power systems and compression businesses, highlighted by a significant award to supply an integrated solution for the Tengiz Gas Separation Complex in Kazakhstan. This project underscores the value of our integrated portfolio in delivering complex, large-scale infrastructure solutions. Further, we are seeing increased commercial synergy potential across the enterprise by combining complementary surface and subsurface OFSE technologies with our extensive IET portfolio, we are unlocking growing synergy opportunities across field management, offshore production, geothermal and CCS. This is most evident in New Energy, booking $434 million of orders in the quarter and a record $2 billion for the full year, well above our $1.4 billion to $1.6 billion target. During the quarter, notable New Energy awards included the supply of critical turbomachinery equipment for a blue ammonia project in the U.S., along with continued strength for geothermal orders in U.S. and Hungary. Looking forward, we are targeting $2.4 billion to $2.6 billion of New Energy orders in 2026. IET's Cordant solutions sustained robust momentum in 2025, achieving double-digit order growth for the third consecutive year and a 20% increase in software orders. During the quarter, the business continued to scale its digital software offerings, reinforcing recurring revenue and life cycle pull-through across our equipment installed base, while also increasing penetration of non-OEM equipment. As the global installed base of critical equipment continues to expand across energy, industrial and power sectors, we are unlocking additional pull-through opportunities for Cordant leveraging our comprehensive solutions to drive greater value for our customers. In OFSE, we continue to see strong customer demand across deepwater and Middle East markets, driven by brownfield and OpEx-led developments that leverage our digitally enabled production portfolio. These solutions directly lower operating costs and support recurring, production-led spending for our customers. During 2025, we secured approximately $3 billion of Production Solutions awards in the Middle East, including approximately $1 billion of multiyear contracts in the fourth quarter from Kuwait Oil Company, Petroleum Development Oman and ADNOC. The awards with KOC and PDO cover the deployment of advanced ESP systems and Leucipa in over 1,000 wells. In addition, the ADNOC contract includes the deployment of our AccessESP system in the offshore Umm Shaif Field, along with continuous digital monitoring services that support recurring revenue over the life of these assets. Momentum has also continued across subsea markets, driving a near record order quarter for Subsea & Surface Pressure Systems, with bookings of $1.1 billion and a book-to-bill of 1.4x. During the quarter, we were awarded a multiyear frame agreement for subsea production systems and services for the Coral North LNG project offshore Mozambique. Now turning to the macro on Slide 6. Despite the ongoing geopolitical and trade-related uncertainty, the global macro environment remained resilient through 2025. While these headwinds are expected to persist, we anticipate modestly stronger year-over-year GDP growth in 2026, supported by continued investment in generative AI, easing inflation and a supportive fiscal backdrop in several major economies. This economic resilience is mirrored by the evolving landscape of global energy demand. Long-term energy demand continues to rise driven by population growth, rising living standards and accelerating electrification. At the same time, digital infrastructure, AI and data centers are adding a new and durable layer of energy demand, reinforcing the need for reliable, scalable and dispatchable power. Industry estimates suggest that AI infrastructure spending totaled more than $500 billion in 2025 and is expected to approach $1 trillion annually in the late 2020s. Resilient power supply has emerged as a key bottleneck, which creates a significant opportunity for Baker Hughes as data center build-out increases demand for behind-the-meter power solutions, providing speed, reliability and scale. Against this backdrop, we now expect to book approximately $3 billion of data center-related orders between 2025 and 2027. Given its abundance, cost-effective reliability and comparatively lower emissions profile, natural gas continues to play a central role in powering data centers. Looking ahead to 2040, we expect global natural gas demand growth of approximately 20%. This strong growth in natural gas underpins accelerating investment in gas and power infrastructure, which we expect to represent an increasing share of our $40-plus billion IET order target during Horizon Two. For LNG, demand continues its strong growth trajectory, increasing by approximately 7% in 2025. Looking forward, LNG demand is expected to increase by at least 75% by 2040, driven primarily by growth across Asia. Reflecting this strength and near-term order visibility, we expect to exceed our 2024 to 2026 LNG FID outlook of 100 MTPA after reaching FID on 83 MTPA of projects over the last 2 years. This further reinforces our long-held view of 800 MTPA installed base by 2030 and advances progress toward our 950 MTPA outlook for 2035. Turning to oil. Against the backdrop of dynamic geopolitical risks, oil prices have remained somewhat volatile in recent months as markets weigh potential supply disruptions against rising OPEC+ and offshore production. We believe further reduction in idled OPEC+ supply, alongside more constructive oil supply and demand balances, is required before a broad inflection in oilfield services activity emerges. That inflection is likely a 2027 catalyst for the sector and may mark the beginning of an upcycle. Taking current macro factors into account, we expect low single-digit declines in global upstream spending in 2026. In North America, spending is expected to decline at a mid-single-digit rate as operators maintain both capital discipline and inventory preservation. However, our production-weighted exposure positions us to outperform the market. International spending is expected to be slightly down, with resilience in the Middle East and Africa offset by continued softness in other regions. Longer term, the outlook remains constructive, particularly internationally and offshore, where significant investment will be required to sustain production growth and meet rising global oil demand. We also see continued growth in OpEx-driven upstream investment, as operators focus on enhancing recovery rates and extending the life of existing assets that will leverage our differentiated Well Construction and Production Solutions portfolio. Moving to Slide 7 and 8. I want to discuss how Baker Hughes is positioned to capture a significant growth opportunity in global power infrastructure spend and how our power systems portfolio is enabling reliability, efficiency, flexibility and long-term decarbonization for customers. This portfolio builds on decades of aeroderivative and heavy-duty gas turbine technology development, complemented by deliberate organic investment in our NovaLT gas turbine platform, our acquisition of BRUSH Power Generation and the pending acquisition of Chart. Together, these actions have created differentiated capabilities that span power generation, grid stability and energy management. Looking ahead, we plan to continue advancing our power systems portfolio, with a clear focus on expanding our solutions offering across these 3 capabilities. These strategic efforts positions us strongly for what lies ahead. We believe that global power demand is entering a multiyear cycle. By 2040, global demand is expected to double to approximately 60,000 terawatt hours. This increase implies a compounded annual growth rate of over 4%, with gas-fired power generation playing a significant role in this expansion. These developments are being driven by several long-term structural trends that are transforming global power markets. First, digitization (sic) [ digitalization ] and AI-driven compute are fundamentally reshaping power demand. Data centers are rapidly growing source of energy demand, requiring uninterrupted and highly dependable power supply. Estimates project that data center power demand will increase by a 12% compounded annual growth rate through 2040 as AI workloads increase in scale. Second, the ongoing transition toward electrification in both transportation and industrial sectors is contributing to a structural increase in electricity demand. The adoption of electric vehicles is rising rapidly, with projections indicating that the global EV fleet will approximately triple by 2030 and increase nearly ninefold by 2040. Additionally, industrial companies are advancing their decarbonization initiatives by transitioning from fuel-based processes to electrically driven alternatives. This includes adopting advanced heat pump technologies and integrating electrified equipment into their industrial operations. Also, renewable integration, hydrogen production through electrolysis and carbon capture systems all require significant incremental power, even as they reduce overall emissions intensity. Collectively, these factors are expected to contribute to a prolonged period of growth in power demand, reinforcing the need for reliable, flexible and energy-efficient power solutions. This trend will drive continued investment across generation, distributed power and grid resilience and it highlights the requirements for mission-critical power systems solutions that can deliver both reliability today and transition ready capability for the future. This is where Baker Hughes is uniquely positioned. Through our power systems portfolio, which is highlighted on Slide 8, we sit squarely at the intersection of the key megatrends driving global power demand. Our strategy is deliberately built around fuel flexibility, electrification, digital integration and portfolio expansion, enabling us to deliver full life cycle power solutions across industrial, data center, grid, renewable and oil and gas markets. The portfolio addresses an annual market opportunity projected to exceed $100 billion by 2030 with solutions that are either currently available or under development, supported by ongoing organic investments. Let me briefly walk you through our power systems portfolio and how it differentiates Baker Hughes as we capture accelerating growth in global power infrastructure spending. Our power systems business is built around 3 core capabilities: power generation, grid stability and energy management, with digital, integrated systems and aftermarket services spanning across all 3. For power generation, we offer solutions across simple and combined cycle configurations, alongside clean power offerings that include geothermal, flex-fuel and our developing industrial-scale oxy combustion solution. This portfolio brings together a broad range of aeroderivative and heavy-duty gas turbines for the oil and gas sector, alongside industrial gas turbines, steam turbines, turboexpanders and generators that address a wide spectrum of power generation applications across diverse end markets. We are seeing the strongest growth in our NovaLT industrial gas turbines, engineered for distributed and behind-the-meter applications. The NovaLT is hydrogen-ready and capable of operating on natural gas, blended fuels and up to 100% hydrogen, with development plans in place to enable ammonia fuel flexibility. Its high efficiency, fast-start capability and low NOx performance make it particularly well suited for power generation across data centers, industrial facilities and the oil and gas markets as well as the mechanical-drive applications. Our core oil and gas markets also continued to drive strong demand for power generation. In 2025, we secured orders of approximately 3 gigawatts for oil and gas power applications, supporting distributed power across LNG facilities, FPSOs, refineries, petrochemical plants and oilfields. Beyond gas turbines, we bring differentiated capabilities in steam turbines and turboexpanders, supporting geothermal, biomass, waste-to-energy and pressure-recovery applications. With an installed base of more than 700 steam turbines and turboexpanders globally, we have proven our experience in delivering reliable, efficient power across both renewable and industrial markets. We continue to advance our leadership in geothermal, highlighted by a recent order to supply the 5 Organic Rankine Cycle power plants at Fervo's Cape Station power generation project, which is expected to deliver 300 megawatts of clean, reliable and affordable power to the grid. In addition to the surface scope, Baker Hughes is also providing differentiated subsurface expertise, reflecting our ability to integrate subsurface capabilities with surface power generation. By combining these capabilities, we are uniquely positioned to enable scalable, repeatable geothermal developments, delivering firm, renewable baseload power with attractive project economics for our customers. Through our BRUSH Power Generation brand, we also provide generators, electric motors and synchronous condensers, supported by life cycle services and digital remote monitoring. These capabilities are increasingly critical as grids become more reliant on intermittent power and require greater inertia, voltage control and resilience. Our controls, power electronics and digital platforms, including Cordant, enable real-time optimization, emissions monitoring and system-level reliability that enhance our power systems value proposition to customers. We also offer industrial heat pumps and grid-stabilization technologies, supporting electrification and decarbonization across industrial and power applications. Looking ahead, the pending acquisition of Chart will add differentiated thermal-management capabilities, further complementing our power generation portfolio and enabling the development of integrated trigeneration solutions for customers. To summarize, Baker Hughes offers a broad power solutions portfolio with capabilities spanning generation, grid stability and energy management that positions us to meet the diverse needs of customers across data centers, industrials, power, renewables and traditional energy markets. As global electricity demand accelerates and energy infrastructure evolves, Baker Hughes is delivering solutions that drive long-term growth, operational resilience and low carbon readiness, positioning us exceptionally well for the next phase of growth in the global power market. Before turning the call over to Ahmed, I want to reiterate the strength of our 2025 results. Despite macro-related headwinds in OFSE and tariff-related trade friction, we delivered 90 basis points of margin expansion driven by continued execution of the Baker Hughes Business System and a disciplined focus on pricing optimization and productivity enhancements. At the same time, the breadth and versatility of our portfolio supported a record year of IET orders, underscoring the durability of our strategy. These results demonstrate that Baker Hughes continues to execute and deliver for our customers and shareholders. With that, I'll turn the call over to Ahmed.