Thank you, David. Good morning, everyone. Turning to slide eight. We delivered record sales in the fourth quarter of $253.8 million, up 1.8% from the prior year period on a constant currency basis and above the high end of the guidance we provided last quarter. We are working hard to improve our customer experience and we are pleased that we were able to reduce past due backlog by 25% or $10 million from last quarter’s level. Looking at our sales bridge, pricing gains of $14.5 million or 5.7% accelerated as we converted orders to revenue at more current prices. This was up 20 basis points from our Q3 level. Volume decreased by $9.9 million or 3.9% and foreign currency translation reduced sales by $4.2 million or 1.7% of sales. Let me provide a little color on sales by region. For the fourth quarter, we saw a modest growth of 0.3% in the U.S., which was driven by a 6.3% improvement in pricing. Sales volume was down 6%. This was largely due to a decision we made to forego year-end promotions, so we could focus on reducing our past due backlog. Outside of the U.S., sales grew 4.1% on a constant currency basis, pricing improved by 4.9% and sales volume decreased modestly by 0.8%. We were encouraged with the volume increases we saw in certain regions outside of Europe, the Middle East and Africa. We recorded volume gains of approximately 16% in Canada, 12% in Asia and 9% in Latin America. Volumes declined 7% in EMEA. Our short-cycle business in EMEA saw volume gains, but this was more than offset by a slowing in our project business with the exception of our rail business, which had certain projects shift from Q3 to Q4, which we mentioned last quarter. Quoting activity remains strong, but there has been a hesitancy by customers to convert quotes to orders given the economic uncertainty that continues to exist in Europe. On slide nine, gross margin of 35.9% was up 220 basis points from the prior year. On an adjusted basis, gross margin was higher by 110 basis points. Year-over-year, fourth quarter gross profit increased $5.7 million and was driven by several factors, which you can see in the table. Let me comment on a few highlights on our gross profit bridge. Pricing net of material inflation added $9.2 million of gross profit as we more than offset $5.3 million of material inflation in the quarter. We are seeing material inflation decelerate, which is a good trend as we enter fiscal year 2024. We are also seeing freight costs start to abate. We had two purchase accounting items in the prior year, which did not repeat related to the Garvey acquisition amounting to $3.2 million. Offsetting these items were foreign currency translation, which reduced gross profit by $1.3 million and lower sales volume and mix reduced gross profit by $5.4 million. As David noted earlier, we expect gross margins to expand on the order of 50 basis points to 100 basis points annually. Moving to slide 10. RSG&A expense was $57.2 million in the quarter or 22.5% of sales. This included $1.7 million of pro forma adjustments for business realignment and acquisition integration costs, as well as our headquarters relocation in Charlotte. Besides these items, the sequential increase in RSG&A included $700,000 of incremental R&D spending, as well as an adjustment to our annual incentive plan accruals of $2.8 million, offset by $1.2 million of acquisition contingent consideration booked last quarter. Compared with the prior year, RSG&A costs were higher by $2.4 million, which includes $2.9 million of higher incentive and stock compensation costs and $700,000 for our headquarters relocation. Offsetting these increases were foreign currency translation, which reduced our cost by $800,000. For the fiscal 2024 first quarter, we expect RSG&A expense to be approximately $56 million. This includes the addition of montratec in our financials for the month of June. Let me remind you that we are committed to driving RSG&A as a percent of sales to 21% by fiscal year 2027 through a combination of cost control actions and scale. Turning to slide 11. We achieved record operating income of $27.5 million in the quarter, representing an increase of 14%. Operating margin expanded 130 basis points due to gross margin expansion resulting from our previous pricing actions. We also achieved record adjusted operating income of $29.2 million or 11.5% of sales, which was a 30-basis-point increase over the prior year. As you can see on slide 12, we recorded GAAP earnings per diluted share for the quarter of $0.48, up $0.07 versus the prior year. Adjusted earnings per diluted share of $0.80 was up $0.01 from the prior year. Our tax rate on a GAAP basis was 35% for both the quarter and year. The tax rate was unfavorably impacted by 3 percentage points due to the settlement of income tax assessments related to tax periods prior to the company’s acquisition of STAHL, which we discussed in the first quarter. The company received full reimbursement from STAHL’s prior owner, which was recorded as a gain in other income and expense on the financial statements. The tax rate also reflects an unfavorable impact of 2 percentage points due to the recording of a U.S. State Tax Valuation Allowance. The valuation allowance primarily relates to changes in the company’s expectations regarding its ability to more likely than not utilize certain state net operating losses prior to their expiration. Additionally, the tax rate was also unfavorably affected by non-deductible compensation expense and U.S. taxes on foreign earnings. These items increased the tax rate by 2 percentage points each. For modeling purposes, even though we are 60% hedged to interest rate exposure, interest expense is expected to increase to $9 million in the first quarter with the incremental interest expense from the montratec acquisition for one month and the Fed’s recent rate increases. Weighted average diluted shares outstanding were approximately $29 million and we are increasing our pro forma tax rate to 25% for calculating non-GAAP adjusted earnings per share. This change largely reflects a shift in the mix of our earnings to higher income tax jurisdictions, namely Germany. On slide 13, we delivered record adjusted EBITDA of $147.8 million, which resulted in an adjusted EBITDA margin of 15.8%. We are making steady progress towards our target of $1.5 billion in revenue with a 21% EBITDA margin in fiscal 2027. In addition, our return on invested capital ended the fiscal year at 7%. ROIC is a key metric in our long-term incentive plan and we expect to see this improve over time as we advance our efforts to drive growth, reduce costs, improve productivity and simplify both our product lines and factories. We are focused on these key metrics as we drive profitable growth and transform the business. Moving to slide 14. We had very strong cash generation in the fourth quarter as we delivered record quarterly free cash flow of $63.6 million. This includes cash from operating activities of $66.7 million, offset by CapEx of $3.1 billion. We made measurable improvement in working capital in the quarter as we drove working capital as a percent of sales down to 17.3% from 22.1% at December. Our free cash flow conversion was a best-in-class 147%. We anticipate that CapEx will be increasing fiscal 2024 to $30 million to $40 million as we are making investments in a lower cost center of excellence to simplify our factory footprint, as well as increased capacity, productivity and throughput. Turning to slide 15. We made significant strides delevering and ended the fiscal year with a net debt leverage ratio of 2.2 times on a financial covenant basis. With the montratec acquisition, we estimate that pro forma leverage will increase to 2.7 times at closing. With our strong cash generation and plans to pay down another $40 million of debt in fiscal 2024, our net leverage is expected to drop to approximately 2.5 times by the end of fiscal 2024. Last week, we closed on an amendment to our credit -- current credit facility, which increased the size of our revolver to $175 million from $100 million. We will utilize this borrowing capacity to initially fund the montratec acquisition. We are also nearly complete with an accounts receivable securitization that we discussed on the call announcing the deal. We will use all of the proceeds from that financing to partially pay down outstanding borrowings under the revolver. We will next look to term out the remainder of the revolver borrowings with an incremental Term Loan B when market conditions are favorable. Once complete, this will bring us back to a covenant-light capital structure as the financial covenant is only tested when the revolver is drawn. We will also file a new shelf registration by the end of June as our previous shelf registration expired. While not tied to the montratec financing, this will provide financial flexibility down the road. Please advance to slide 16 and I will turn it back over to David.