Thank you, Amit, and good evening. It has been a little over a month since I rejoined the company, and it has been nice and reinvigorating to get back involved here at Cardlytics. For fiscal year 2025, our top line billings were $385 million, down 13.3% year-over-year. Our revenue was $233 million, down 16.2% year-over-year, and our annual adjusted EBITDA was $10.1 million, up $7.5 million year-over-year. While we navigated the supply constraints throughout 2025, we were disciplined in how we managed our expenses, driving the third consecutive year of positive adjusted EBITDA. We are committed to attaining self-sustainability and believe this commitment requires balancing investments in growth and disciplined expense management. The rest of my comments will be year-over-year comparisons to the fourth quarter of 2025, unless stated otherwise. In the fourth quarter, we delivered top line as expected across billings, revenue and adjusted contribution while surpassing the high end of our guidance for adjusted EBITDA. In Q4, our total billings were $94.1 million, a 19% decrease year-over-year. Even with the headwinds of supply constraints and content restrictions, we were able to retain the vast majority of our advertisers, which reflects the differentiated value and incrementality we drive. Q4 revenue was $56.1 million, a 24.2% decrease year-over-year. Our U.S. revenue, excluding Bridg, was $40.1 million, decreasing 33.5% year-over-year due to lower billings as well as pricing adjustments, which drove lower billings margins than the prior year. This margin impact was partially due to strategic investments in certain advertisers to drive incremental ROAS, as well as an isolated onetime variance in December delivery as a result of the supply changes to our network. U.K. revenue was $10.8 million, increasing 35.1% year-over-year. This is our U.K. business' largest ever quarter, driven by deepened engagement with advertisers and increased supply. Q4 adjusted contribution was $31.7 million, a 22.1% decrease year-over-year. However, we expanded our Q4 margin as a percentage of revenue to 56.5%, an increase of 1.5 basis points to a more favorable FI partner mix. This margin is the highest we have achieved to date, driven primarily by growth of our newest FI partners. Adjusted EBITDA was positive $8.5 million, an increase of $2.1 million. Total adjusted operating expenses, excluding stock-based compensation, came in at $23.2 million, a reduction of $11.1 million year-over-year due to the reduction in staff in May and October as well as the optimization of our cloud infrastructure. Operating expenses benefited from $2.6 million in onetime benefits from an ERC tax credit. In Q4, operating cash flow was a positive $13 million. Free cash flow was positive $10.5 million, which was an improvement of $11.9 million from prior year, due primarily to our lower expense base as well as receiving the full $6 million impact of 2 ERC tax credits received in 2025. On the balance sheet, we ended Q4 with $48.7 million in cash and cash equivalents. During the quarter, we had a net payment of $6 million on our line of credit, resulting in $40.1 million currently drawn on the line. The proceeds from the expected Bridg transaction will serve to bolster the balance sheet, further positioning the business for self-sustainability. In the fourth quarter, we had 227 million MQUs, an increase of 18%, driven by the full ramp of our newest FI partners. Excluding these partners, MQUs would have increased 1%. ACPU was $0.12, down 35% year-over-year as a result of content restriction and as we added new MQUs from our newest FI partners. Now turning to our outlook for Q1 2026. For Q1, we expect billings between $57.5 million and $63.5 million, revenue between $35 million and $40 million, adjusted contribution between $20 million and $23 million and adjusted EBITDA between negative $7.5 million and negative $3.5 million. Our billings guidance represents a negative 41% to negative 35% decrease year-over-year. The primary driver of our expected billings decrease is a result of the content restrictions imposed by one of our largest FI partners and the departure of Bank of America. We will endeavor to execute against several strategies with our banks and advertisers that Amit touched on in his previous comments that will allow us to level set and grow sequentially from this point forward. In Q1, we expect to continue to grow in the U.K., driven by continued success with our largest accounts, growing our new clients and attracting new advertisers to the platform. Revenue as a percentage of billings is expected to be in the low 60% range for Q1. We are making strategic pricing decisions to drive incremental spend from our advertisers to drive higher revenues and to remain competitive in the market, which is funded by our higher-margin bank mix. We expect adjusted contribution as a percentage of revenue to be in the mid- to high 50% range. Even with top line pressure and intentional pricing decisions, we're keeping more of every dollar we generate, which is an important component to our efforts around self-sustainability. A key driver to the improved economics is due to our newest FI partners. That advantage allows us to reinvest in advertiser and consumer incentives to drive incremental budgets. In practice, more compelling rewards translates into better engagement, which strengthens advertiser retention and our ability to scale. For the first quarter, we expect operating expenses to be at or below $27 million, excluding stock-based compensation and severance. This represents a reduction of 27% from the prior year. We remain committed to driving operational efficiency. Our guiding principle is to be laser-focused at executing against our core competencies to drive sequential adjusted contribution growth over the long run. I'll now turn it back to Amit for closing remarks.