Thanks, Courtney. Morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I am Tyler Page, CEO of Cipher Mining Inc., and I am pleased to welcome you to our fourth quarter and full year 2025 business update call. 2025 was a defining year for Cipher. Over the past twelve months, we completed a deliberate and disciplined transformation of the company from a Bitcoin miner with sourcing and development expertise into a digital infrastructure company purpose-built to deliver hyperscale compute. During the year, we secured long-term leases with world-class scalers, executed large-scale project financings, and advanced the development and construction of multiple data center projects. We also took decisive steps to simplify the business and focus our capital, our team, and our future squarely on high performance computing. Today’s call reflects that evolution. We are proud to announce today that we are formally rebranding the company as Cipher Mining Inc. This rebrand reflects what the business has become. This is not an aspirational shift, but a recognition of the work already done and the work we will continue to do. This rebrand represents far more than a new name or visual identity. It marks a complete transition to a business centered on stable, long-duration cash flows and long-term leases with best-in-class hyperscalers. Today’s Cipher is a developer of next-generation digital infrastructure, purpose-built to deliver power-dense, large-scale facilities to exacting hyperscaler specifications. While Bitcoin mining played a foundational role in building our power expertise and development capabilities, our identity today is centered on powering next-generation compute at scale. Therefore, we are taking steps to simplify the company and reallocate capital away from non-core activities, which I will discuss in further depth later on the call. In addition, we are deepening our bench across construction, engineering, operations, and corporate leadership to ensure our organization is fully aligned with this next chapter. The Cipher Mining Inc. brand captures who we are today, a company focused on disciplined execution, precision at pace, and performance proven through delivery. Importantly, this evolution is not a reinvention. It is a natural extension of what we already do exceptionally well: large-scale, energy-intensive infrastructure delivered with speed to market, disciplined capital allocation, and operational rigor. The same capabilities that built our platform are precisely what hyperscalers require today. So when we say we are built for hyperscale, we mean more than just building for hyperscalers. We mean that looking forward, Cipher Mining Inc. itself is built for hyperscale. We have built a spectacular foundation for growth at speed in our evolving world. This strategic evolution is the direct result of our team’s disciplined execution over the past six months. Slide five shows just how manic the pace of leasing and financing has been over the last six months. Each sequential step on our path has strengthened our relationships, enhanced our credibility, and positioned us for what comes next. We believed and have now proven that our first lease at Barber Lake was just the beginning, and have since signed a second lease at Black Pearl and a Barber Lake lease upsize. Success on the leasing side has been, as important as our equally valuable has been our transformational capital raising. Most recently, we completed a pioneering and highly successful bond for $2,000,000,000. This offering was met with exceptional investor demand, which allowed us to price it at a yield one full percent lower than our previous bond offering at 6.125%, a clear validation of our strategy and a vote of confidence from conservative bond investors in our ability to execute. This issuance secured all the remaining CapEx needed for the build out of Black Pearl, and it included a reimbursement of approximately $233,000,000 to Cipher Mining Inc. for our prior equity contributions to the site. Greg will elaborate on all of our financings in his remarks, and provide more detail on how we think about financing our growth going forward. While we build data centers, sign new leases and complete financings, our outstanding origination team still keeps coming to work every day. In addition to all of our other activity this quarter, we acquired Ulysses, a 200 megawatt site in Ohio with all necessary interconnection approvals to participate in the PJM market. The site is expected to energize in 2027, marks Cipher’s first acquisition in PJM, and is well suited for HPC applications. The Ulysses campus takes its name from Ohio native Ulysses S. Grant, a leader defined by operational discipline, moving the right resources to the right place on time through any conditions. That is the mindset behind our hopes for the future of this site and others in our pipeline. Power-forward data center campuses engineered for reliability today and adaptability tomorrow with modular designs that can absorb multiple upgrade cycles as compute technology evolves. As I discussed earlier and as demonstrated by our incredible quarter of momentum, Cipher’s rebrand reflects more than a change in name. It marks a fundamental evolution in our business model. We are now squarely focused on securing durable, long-term cash flows through contracted leases with the world’s leading hyperscalers. This model prioritizes visibility, stability, and scale. To date, we have executed two data center campus leases representing 600 megawatts of gross capacity, and approximately $9,300,000,000 in contracted revenue. These agreements carry initial terms of ten to fifteen years, with multiple extension options and translate to approximately $669,000,000 of average annualized NOI over the next ten years. Our 3.4 gigawatt pipeline combined with a best-in-class team positions us to continue to execute on this new business model by securing additional leases across sites. Cipher’s future trajectory on slide seven speaks for itself. Beginning this year, our initial leases commence with rent payments. And from there, you can see a clear and steady ramp in cash flow as additional capacity comes online. Our leases create visible, nonvolatile contractual growth over the balance of the decade. Based solely on the contracts currently executed, we expect our leases to generate $669,000,000 average annualized net operating income from October 2026 to September 2036. By 2035, we project approximately $754,000,000 in annual net operating income. What is important here is not just the magnitude of growth, but the predictability. These are contracted revenues tied to mission-critical infrastructure, with multiyear lease terms and extension options. That level of visibility fundamentally changes the profile of this company. Demand for power-dense hyperscale infrastructure continues to outpace supply, and we are confident in our ability to execute additional leases for our pipeline sites, positioning us to extend this trajectory much further. We are proud of the foundation we built in Bitcoin mining which shaped our capabilities. But as we look ahead, our direction is clear. We are building a business defined by durable, stable, long-term contracted cash flows. Therefore, we are taking steps to reposition the company away from Bitcoin mining as we continue to transition towards a pure-play digital infrastructure platform. With that focus in mind, last week, we sold our three 40 megawatt joint venture sites, Alborz, Bear and Chief, where we held 49% interests. Our interests in the sites were acquired in an all-stock transaction by Canaan, a highly reputable manufacturer of industry-leading Bitcoin miners. Given our desire for no further capital investment into Bitcoin mining, and given Canaan’s role as the supplier of mining rigs to the JV sites, Canaan is the most natural buyer to acquire our equity interests. In Bitcoin mining, vertical integration of rig manufacturer and site operator is the way of the future. We believe Canaan’s unmatched machine quality, vertical integration, technology leadership, and expanding energy platform make them the right steward for the next phase of growth at the Alborz, Bear and Chief sites. By receiving Canaan equity in this transaction, we retain exposure to the potential upside of Bitcoin mining through a fully vertical integrated platform. We see significant opportunity ahead for Canaan who has consistently delivered the best performing rigs in our fleet. We also know the team well and have strong conviction in their ability to execute, scale the platform and drive sustained growth and improved valuation over time. This transaction allows us to simplify our structure, accelerate our strategic transition, and maintain optimized exposure to the industry in a capital-light way. Given our pivot away from Bitcoin mining going forward, it makes less sense to manage a Bitcoin inventory as part of our corporate strategy. In the fourth quarter, with higher Bitcoin prices, we liquidated a substantial portion of our treasury to reinvest in the growth of the HPC hosting business. Due to recent Bitcoin price action, we have been much less aggressive in our selling, but will continue to manage the sale of the remaining Bitcoin in inventory over the course of the next year. As of February 20, we held approximately 1,166 Bitcoin. We plan to opportunistically reduce that position over time, and reinvest the proceeds into the HPC hosting business, likely exiting entirely by 2026 as we redeploy capital into contracted infrastructure opportunities. All Bitcoin mining rigs from Black Pearl have been sold, marked for sale, or redeployed to our last remaining Bitcoin mining site at Odessa. Following the sale of our JVs, and the retrofitted Black Pearl, our hash rate will be approximately 11.6 exahash per second going forward, driven by our Odessa site. At Odessa, we continue to benefit from our unique fixed price PPA, which has positioned us among the lowest-cost producers of Bitcoin in the industry. We are proud of the site’s performance and expect it to continue generating meaningful cash flow as our data center leases ramp. We maintain the flexibility to continue mining at Odessa through the expiration of the PPA in July 2027 while continuing to evaluate a potential conversion of the site to support HPC workloads. Let us now turn to a review of our current portfolio. Slide 10 provides a high-level transaction overview of our lease at Barber Lake, highlighting contracted megawatts and the key economic terms across our first lease. Now that a lease is signed and we have secured financing for the project, the next phase of value creation at Barber Lake is driven by disciplined construction, on-time delivery, and converting contracted capacity into cash flows. Construction at the site is well underway. Concrete foundations have been poured, structural steel is going vertical, interior mechanical, electrical, and plumbing work has commenced, and utility work continues to progress. All current design milestones have been achieved, and we have received consistently positive tenant feedback, an important validation as we continue toward full build out. We have secured approximately 95% of long lead equipment with delivery schedules aligned to support our completion targets. Additionally, we have secured 100% of the necessary workforce across all critical construction work streams through the duration of the project. On any given workday, there are over 400 personnel on-site driving progress safely and efficiently. Importantly, the project remains on schedule and is tracking to meet both early access and substantial completion milestones under our contractual timelines. This is where our execution culture truly differentiates us, translating signed leases into delivered infrastructure on time and on budget. We will continue to update the market as we hit key milestones but we are very pleased with the progress to date. Slide 12 provides a high-level transaction overview of the key economic terms of our triple-net lease with AWS at Black Pearl. Similar to Barber Lake, now that the lease is signed and financing is completed, we are squarely focused on delivery. At Black Pearl, data center development is on track with engineering, procurement and construction activities underway. The transition of the site is progressing as planned with Bitcoin mining decommissioning being completed this week. Importantly, approximately 85% of the infrastructure currently deployed at Black Pearl is expected to be repurposed for the AWS lease. This reuse of existing infrastructure meaningfully reduces execution risk, improves capital efficiency, and accelerates our path to delivery. Overall, Black Pearl reflects the same disciplined execution framework we are applying across the portfolio, locking in supply chain visibility early and advancing toward on-time, on-budget delivery. Turning to slide 14, Odessa is our last operating Bitcoin mining site. As a reminder, Odessa’s fixed-price power purchase agreement at approximately $0.028 per kilowatt hour continues to position Cipher among the lowest-cost Bitcoin producers in the industry. This structural cost advantage combined with disciplined operations enables us to generate meaningful cash flow moving forward should we elect to continue mining through the expiration of the PPA in July 2027. Today, we are operating 207 megawatts of capacity supporting approximately 11.6 exahash per second of hash rate. Fleet efficiency remains strong at approximately 17.2 joules per terahash. Let us now shift to an update on our development portfolio. Given the recent headlines surrounding ERCOT, we want to take a moment to provide our perspective and address any implications for our development pipeline. We will also highlight several sites where we have the highest degree of confidence in securing interconnection approvals based on our ongoing dialogue with ERCOT and the relevant transmission and distribution service providers. This past quarter, we strengthened our regulatory expertise by hiring Lee Bratcher as Head of Policy and Government Affairs. Lee brings to Cipher extensive industry experience, a deep understanding of the Texas and federal energy regulatory landscape, and strong relationships across ERCOT and the TDSPs. With his extensive understanding of ERCOT’s processes and evolving rulemaking, we have a great degree of confidence in our ability to navigate this environment effectively. As a reminder, Cipher welcomes all legislative efforts to clean up the lengthening interconnect queue, and we have been consistent that any new rules requiring posting of deposits and acceleration of serious developers is a good thing for us. The recent developments represent a positive step forward for the data center industry in Texas. Earlier this month, ERCOT discussed the potential implementation of a batch study process, and that the existing development and stakeholder process is expected to last until June 2026. While the final batch process remains to be determined, we believe we have made enough significant progress at certain development sites to be included in early batches with firm loads. We expect these sites to remain on track for the energizations we have previously communicated. Specifically, the sites on slide 16 are either already interconnection approved or in the final stages of the current approval process. At the top of the slide is Stingray, our 250-acre campus in Andrews, Texas. The site is fully interconnection approved for 100 megawatts and remains on track to energize in the fourth quarter of this year. Substation development is already underway, and with the interconnection secured, the load is firm. Given the site’s approval status, timeline to power, and quality of location, we are increasingly confident in securing a lease in the near term. This confidence stems from having engaged with a broad range of interested tenants and having now identified a preferred partner with whom we are in advanced lease negotiations. As lease pricing continues to move in our favor alongside growing demand, we expect lease economics here to be among the most favorable we have achieved to date. And while the site has 100 megawatts of gross capacity today, we are actively exploring behind-the-meter solutions to expand capacity over time, not only at this location, but across our broader portfolio and pipeline. Reveille in Toutoula, Texas is also fully approved for 70 megawatts and remains on track to energize in 2027. We have already initiated substation development. The project falls below the megawatt threshold that would trigger the batch process, and its interconnection is already approved. Ulysses, our recently acquired 200 megawatts site in Ohio, has all necessary approvals to participate in the PJM market, not ERCOT, and is expected to energize in 2027. We are in advanced discussions with potential tenants regarding an HPC lease at that location. Looking to the rest of the pipeline in ERCOT, the McLean site has all studies approved, deposits have been funded with the TDSP, and the land is secured. The site is undergoing the final interconnection approval processes. Based on this information, we expect the energization timeline and capacity of this site to be unaffected by any new batch processes. For each of McKeska and Colchis, studies have been submitted, all requested deposits have been funded, and the land has been secured. This makes them likely candidates for an early batch as well. We continue to push all remaining workflows forward and fund all the deposits as soon as possible to ensure that the energization timelines are preserved and the loads are firm. This slide provides an overview of our current operating and energized capacity as well as outlines our full future pipeline. We are very pleased with the composition of the portfolio today. We also remain confident in both our regulatory positioning and the strength of our roughly 3.4 gigawatt development pipeline, all being prioritized for HPC. Our development pipeline is the result of years of sourcing, permitting, and infrastructure work, and it positions us well to serve the increasing demand we are seeing. We believe the value of this pipeline lies not only in megawatts, but in the credibility Cipher brings to those megawatts, both in our ability to sign leases with the best tenants in the world and in our ability to construct and operate data centers. Our conviction has only strengthened since last quarter. We believe that Cipher is among the best positioned companies in the world to seize the near-term opportunities emerging from the growing power shortfall. While we have made significant progress to date, we are still in the early innings. We expect our pipeline to expand, additional leases to be executed, and Cipher Mining Inc. to further solidify its position as a global leader in data center development and operations. I will now turn the call over to our CFO, Greg Mumford, who will walk through our financing activities, capital strategy, and the financial results in more detail. Thank you, Tyler, and good morning, everyone. Over the past year, Cipher took significant steps to reshape the financial profile of the company by securing long-duration contracted cash flows in HPC hosting, by expanding relationships with investment-grade counterparties, and by broadening our access to capital. Today, we are building a platform designed to support scalable growth while minimizing dilution and maintaining balance sheet discipline. During the fourth quarter, we upsized our lease with FluidStacks supported by Google, we executed a long-term lease agreement with AWS, and we completed two high-yield bond offerings that fully funded Barber Lake through substantial completion. Subsequent to quarter end, we successfully financed the development at Black Pearl. Importantly, each successive transaction was completed on improved economic terms reflecting a strengthening credit profile and increasing investor confidence in our long-term strategy. Before turning to our financial results, I would like to highlight our project-level financings, which were central to derisking execution across Barber Lake and Black Pearl. Collectively, these transactions secured long-term fixed rate non-recourse financing that fully funds each project through substantial completion. As a result, we have eliminated construction financing uncertainty, isolated project-specific risks, and reduced reliance on near-term capital markets access. This disciplined financing model creates a repeatable framework for scaling development while protecting corporate liquidity. In our first issuance in November, we raised $1,400,000,000 by selling five-year senior secured notes at 7.125% to fund the development of Barber Lake. The transaction was met with strong institutional demand, resulting in a multiple-times oversubscribed order book and broad participation from high-quality credit investors. Following the Barber Lake lease upsizing at improved economic terms, we executed a $333,000,000 tack-on at the same rate, bringing the total debt financing to $1,730,000,000. Together with our previously invested equity, and $477,000,000 of additional equity contributed in connection with the financings, Barber Lake is now fully funded through substantial completion. Earlier this month, we completed another project-level financing, raising $2,000,000,000 by selling five-year senior secured notes at 6.125%. The transaction was significantly oversubscribed by 6.5 times, with approximately $13,000,000,000 in orders and broad institutional participation. We allocated the bonds to over 200 accounts, roughly double the average high-yield transaction. Cipher now has a significant group of institutional credit investors following our story. More importantly, the financing fully funds Black Pearl through substantial completion and included a $233,000,000 CapEx reimbursement of prior equity contributions, further strengthening corporate liquidity. Since issuance, our bonds have traded at yields below original pricing levels, reflecting improved risk perception and continued investor confidence. Across both projects, we have now secured funding certainty through substantial completion using long-term fixed rate nonrecourse debt aligned with contracted lease revenue. As our capital strategy continues to evolve along with our corporate development efforts, we will remain grounded in core principles. Cipher’s approach is built around maintaining a flexible and conservative capital structure, matching contracted cash flows with long-term financing, and protecting the corporate balance sheet. We are currently prioritizing a disciplined approach to consolidated leverage, a preference for nonrecourse project-level financing through construction, and staggered debt maturities as we scale. As additional leases are executed, we expect to continue utilizing project-level nonrecourse financing structures through construction. Our HPC lease structures provide long-term highly predictable cash flows supported by strong counterparties, which we believe support attractive financing terms and a declining cost of capital as the business matures, as evidenced by the sequential improvement in pricing across our recent issuances. Over time, as projects stabilize, we expect opportunities to refinance and recycle capital into future developments, supporting a self-funding growth model. At the corporate level, we ended the quarter with $754,000,000 of cash, cash equivalents, and Bitcoin, providing significant flexibility to fund equity contributions for future projects. We remain disciplined in prioritizing capital sources that limit shareholder dilution. This includes opportunistically monetizing our Bitcoin inventory as we transition the business, as well as exploring short- and long-term financing arrangements. As the business continues to mature, we may evaluate additional sources of non-dilutive capital to bolster corporate liquidity. Let us now turn to a review of our financials for the period ended 12/31/2025. Our financial results reflect the strategic evolution Tyler described, a deliberate repositioning of the company as a leading developer and operator of data centers purpose-built for AI workloads. In the fourth quarter, we earned revenue of $60,000,000, down from Q3, driven by the difficult Bitcoin mining environment and Bitcoin price decline. We expect revenue from Bitcoin mining to further decrease as we finish decommissioning miners at Black Pearl this month. For the quarter, we reported a GAAP net loss of $734,000,000. Importantly, the majority of this reported loss was driven by the change in fair value of certain noncash items and transition-related impacts rather than core operating cash performance. The largest component was the $450,000,000 noncash mark-to-market associated with the embedded derivative liability of the 2031 convertible notes we issued in September. As the price of our convertible notes increased following issuance, the liability was revalued, resulting in a noncash loss. Shortly after issuing the notes, we increased the authorized shares available to the company for issuance which changed the accounting treatment. The conversion feature now qualifies for equity and will no longer be subject to fair value accounting going forward. In addition, we impaired various parts of our legacy Bitcoin mining business as we focus on transitioning the company. As we decommission mining at Black Pearl, we recognized a $90,000,000 write-down that reflects a fair value adjustment on the miners moved from PP&E to assets held for sale. We also recognized a $45,000,000 impairment on the PP&E at the Odessa facility caused by the recent depressed cash price. We recognized an unrealized loss of $39,000,000 on our Bitcoin holdings, and a smaller realized loss on our Bitcoin sales. We will continue to opportunistically monetize our remaining Bitcoin, likely exiting the position entirely by 2026. As we reposition toward contracted HPC infrastructure revenue, we expect volatility from Bitcoin-related items to diminish over time. On the balance sheet, the most notable changes this quarter were increases in restricted cash and long-term debt following the successful financing at Barber Lake. Proceeds are classified as restricted cash as they are dedicated to project construction. As of 12/31/2025, we had $754,000,000 of unrestricted liquidity, including $628,000,000 in cash and $125,000,000 in Bitcoin. Pro forma for our financings, we maintain substantial liquidity, fully funded construction across both projects, and long-term fixed rate project debt. Cipher is well positioned with the financial flexibility needed to execute on our next phase of growth. Before we conclude, let me briefly summarize the strength of our overall financial position. Barber Lake and Black Pearl are both fully funded through substantial completion. We have successfully secured long-term fixed rate nonrecourse project-level debt, reinforcing the durability of our capital structure. At the corporate level, we ended the year with substantial liquidity, which has further improved following the completion of our Black Pearl financing, including the $233,000,000 CapEx reimbursement. And importantly, we do not anticipate the need for additional equity to fund our currently contracted developments. As we transition to long-duration contracted infrastructure cash flows, we believe this disciplined capital structure supports sustainable growth and long-term value creation. Thank you for your continued support. Tyler and I would be happy to take your questions at this time.