Thanks, Arun, and good afternoon, everyone. In Q3, we continued to execute with discipline and focus, advancing our strategic initiatives in alignment with our North Star of growing operating income. Q3's results demonstrate our sustained strong momentum, driven by market share growth, continued optimization of adjusted gross profit or AGP, disciplined cost management and further productivity gains, all supported by our lean operating model and rapidly advancing AI capabilities. Due to significant year-over-year declines in ocean rates and the February 2025 sale of our Europe Surface Transportation business, our total revenue and AGP declined approximately 11% and 4%, respectively. An 18% decline in Global Forwarding AGP driven primarily by the lower ocean rates was partially offset by a 6% increase in NAST AGP. NAST continued to outperform, growing volume 3% year-over-year, significantly outpacing a market that was down 7%, while expanding gross margins and improving operating leverage. Global Forwarding AGP was lower year-over-year due to lower ocean rates, but gross margins expanded year-over-year and sequentially due to disciplined pricing and revenue management. On a monthly basis, compared to Q3 of last year, our total company AGP per business day was down 3% in July, flat in August and down 9% in September. This was primarily driven by lower ocean rates, which caused Q3 ocean AGP per shipment to decline 27.5% year-over-year. Turning to expenses. Q3 personnel expenses were $349.3 million, including $9.7 million of charges related to workforce reductions. Excluding these charges, our Q3 personnel expenses were $339.6 million, down $19.1 million due to the divestiture of our Europe surface transportation business and our continued productivity and cost optimization efforts. Our average headcount was down 10.8% year-over-year in Q3 and was down 2.3% sequentially, illustrating our continued decoupling of headcount growth from volume growth. Based on year-to-date personnel expenses of $1.02 billion, excluding restructuring charges and current expectations for Q4, we still expect 2025 personnel expenses to be in the guidance range of $1.3 billion to $1.4 billion, but above the midpoint of the range. Our Q3 SG&A expenses totaled $135.9 million. Excluding 2024 charges primarily related to the divestiture of our Europe Surface Transportation business, SG&A expenses were up $0.9 million or 0.7% year-over-year. Based on year-to-date SG&A expenses of $417.7 million, excluding restructuring charges and current expectations for Q4, we still expect our 2025 SG&A expenses to be in the range of $550 million to $600 million, but above the midpoint of the range. This guidance includes depreciation and amortization that is expected to be $100 million to $105 million versus our previous guidance of $95 million to $105 million. Shifting back to Q3. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was 20.6%. We continue to expect the full year 2025 tax rate to be in the range of 18% to 20%. We generated $275.4 million in cash from operations in Q3, and our capital expenditures were $18.6 million during the quarter. We still expect our full year capital expenditures to be $65 million to $75 million. From a balance sheet perspective, we ended Q3 with approximately $1.37 billion of liquidity, including $1.23 billion of committed funding under our credit facilities and a cash balance of $137 million. Our net debt-to-EBITDA leverage at the end of Q3 was 1.17x, down from 1.40x at the end of Q2. This financial strength is a key differentiator in our industry, giving us the ability to continue investing through the bottom of the freight cycle and further enhancing our capabilities. While our capital allocation strategy remains grounded in maintaining an investment-grade credit rating, our financial strength and improved leverage ratio enabled us to return approximately $190 million of cash to shareholders in Q3 through $115 million of share repurchases and $75 million of dividends. Through the disciplined execution of our strategy with our lean operating model and AI innovation at its core, Q3's results further validate the lean AI transformation underway at C.H. Robinson. As we carry this momentum forward, we are well positioned to continue outperforming in any market environment while creating long-term value for our stakeholders. That covers our Q3 results. And now I would like to give an update on the financial targets that we originally shared at our 2024 Investor Day in December. Based on the confidence in our strategy, our disciplined execution and our significant runway for further improvement, we issued a separate press release today announcing an increase in our 2026 operating income target. We originally expected to increase our 2026 operating income by $350 million to $450 million versus our 2023 adjusted operating income of $553 million. Today, we increased that expectation by roughly $50 million despite market dynamics that have created greater headwinds than we originally anticipated. This results in a new 2026 operating income target range of $965 million to $1.04 billion. The bottom end of this range, which assumes 0 market volume growth, equates to approximately $6 of earnings per share. The full range of market volume growth assumptions include an expectation that if the market does return to year-over-year growth, it likely won't occur until the second half of 2026, in line with the market predictions of external sources such as ACT Research. So let's talk about what's behind the higher target. In our December Investor Day, we estimated that our strategic initiatives to grow market share, expand gross margins and increase operating leverage would deliver $220 million of adjusted operating income growth in 2026 versus 2024. Today, we are raising that expectation to $336 million, reflecting stronger benefits from our lean AI strategy, resulting in additional productivity improvement and operating leverage as well as additional benefit in 2026 from continued gross margin expansion and market share growth. Embedded in our operating leverage target is an expectation that the disciplined execution of our lean operating model will deliver a baseline of single-digit productivity improvements every year. Then as we incorporate certain innovations into our operations, such as Agentic AI, we expect there to be additional waves of productivity. For 2026, this translates to an expectation that we will again deliver double-digit productivity increases in both NAST and Global Forwarding, and we expect these benefits to be over-indexed to the second half of 2026. Although we are at or nearing our mid-cycle operating margin targets at the bottom of the market cycle, we have not increased those targets. We believe our margin targets represent a high quality of earnings, and we want to retain optionality in how to best deliver shareholder value. In other words, we may choose to invest operating margins above those targets to deliver demonstrable outgrowth if we believe that will deliver higher earnings and a better return for Robinson and our shareholders. To further enhance shareholder value, our Board of Directors has authorized a $2 billion share repurchase program, which we currently intend to execute over approximately 3 years. The new authorization is in addition to the existing share repurchase authorization, which has 4.5 million shares remaining on it. As we have said several times over the past year, we are still in the early innings of the transformation that is occurring at C.H. Robinson with significant runway remaining on the execution of our lean AI strategy. We are proud of the progress we have made and even more excited about what's ahead and about our ability to deliver sustainable, profitable growth and long-term value for our customers and carriers, our people and our shareholders. With that, I'll turn the call back to Dave for his final comments.