Thanks, John, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today to discuss our fourth quarter and full year 2024 financial results and our expectations for our performance in calendar year 2025. I want to start by thanking all of our colleagues across the globe for our continued strong performance and for their commitment to The Vita Coco Company and to our mission of creating ethical, sustainable, better-for-you beverages that uplift our communities and do right by our planet. Coconut water remains one of the fastest-growing categories in the beverage aisle, delivering double-digit volume growth in our major markets, which has resulted in 2024 being another record year for the category and for our company in full-year net sales, net income, and adjusted EBITDA. We believe this reflects the success of our initiatives to drive growth in the category through growing households and increasing occasions. In the US, in 2024, we estimate that the coconut water category grew in household adoptions by 9% and household buy rate by over 7% according to Numerator, reflecting very strong consumer interest in the category which we believe is related to favorable demographic trends, increasing interest in health and wellness, desire for clean ingredients, and growing demand for functional beverages. For the full year 2024, according to Circana, the Vita Coco brand grew 9% in retail dollars in the US, and grew 21% in the UK, while the category grew 14% and 19%, respectively. As we've discussed, we were hampered in the summer by significant inventory shortages due to limited ocean container availability, which limited our third-quarter shipments and negatively affected our service levels. We believe this resulted in the slowdown in branded scan growth in the third quarter which has since strongly rebounded as inventory levels have improved. Both our depletion trends and our scan trends accelerated during the fourth quarter with US Circana showing 9% branded retail dollar growth even though we chose not to repeat a major club promotion from 2023. This acceleration has continued and even accelerated year to date, with US branded scan growth of 20% for the last thirteen-week period ending February 16, 2025. This strong momentum and much stronger inventory position than last year leads me to be very optimistic for branded growth in 2025. In addition to the very healthy Vita Coco retail growth, we've seen strong scan growth for private label coconut water. During the fourth quarter, we saw our private label coconut water shipment trends improve as we put the supply chain challenges of last summer behind us. I believe that our private label business remains a strategically important aspect of our business from a supply chain perspective and that it allows us to benefit more fully from our category growth initiatives. In 2024, our commercial initiatives including emphasis behind Vita Coco multipacks, Vita Coco Farmers Organic, and Vita Coco Juice, proved to be strong growth drivers. I expect these initiatives to continue to drive growth into 2025. One highlight was that Vita Coco Juice continued to gain share at retail with US scans increasing 42% for the full year, outgrowing the canned segment of the category by 2x. The introduction of our Vita Coco coconut water one-liter pack into a key convenience store chain has also been incredibly successful, and we believe that it is now one of the highest-performing items in that retailer's juice store. We believe the fact that consumers are showing a desire for larger packages for on-the-go consumption is an encouraging sign for a long-term growth trajectory. Vita Coco Treats, a refreshingly sweet and delicious coconut milk-based beverage, is beginning to roll out nationally with very strong retailer distribution commitments, and the addition of a new flavor, orange and cream, to provide a better billboard and more options for consumers in search of a midday treat. We're excited about the initial reception for Vita Coco Treats, and for the future of innovative coconut milk-based beverages, which create an indulgent occasion that could offer us yet another path for long-term growth. In 2025, we'll continue our occasion-based marketing to tap into the versatility of coconut water to drive adoption among new consumers and give existing ones more reasons to stock up on Vita Coco. Our initiatives will continue to focus on key occasions like smoothies, cocktails, and greens amongst others. But new for 2025, we expect to place more emphasis on active hydration, attempting to position Vita Coco as the go-to alternative to traditional sports drinks, thanks to its naturally occurring electrolytes. As consumers increasingly prioritize health and clean ingredients, I believe that we are well-positioned to tap into this growing trend to unlock our next phase of consumer growth. Our international business is very healthy with strong performance in Europe led by the UK and Germany. In Germany, the category has grown over 40% over the last year according to Nielsen, and we are now the leading brand in coconut water at three times the size of our closest branded competitor. We believe the growth that we're seeing in our more mature markets like the US and UK is indicative of the long-term potential in our less developed markets. We intend to step up our investment in international markets where we have a strong brand position and can benefit from driving category growth. If we're successful, we believe international will become a larger part of our growth story as these markets are significantly underdeveloped relative to the US. I'm also pleased to share that we recently extended our current Dr. Pepper distribution agreement. This contract extension will allow us to continue to leverage KDP's strong distribution footprint throughout the US and is a testament to a great partnership and relationship that is fifteen years strong. Our priorities for growth remain unchanged: continuing to add households, expanding occasions, acceleration of our international businesses, and innovation to drive new occasions and attract new customers. I believe that coconut water is becoming a household staple across the globe and we're very excited and proud to be the leading brand in our primary market and to help drive this growth. Based on the acceleration of the category seen late in 2024, and year to date and our significantly stronger inventory and additional capacity arriving this year, I believe that we will have an exciting 2025. And now, I'll turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Martin Roper. Thanks, Mike, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to report a strong quarter to finish the year, and to report record annual net sales, net income, and adjusted EBITDA even with the supply chain challenges of the summer and the loss of the private label coconut oil business that started in the second quarter. Net sales in the quarter were up 20% driven by growth of Vita Coco Coconut Water and private label shipments, which benefited from an acceleration of growth in the coconut water category and improvement in available inventory which allowed us to rebuild distributor and retail inventories from the low levels of the third quarter. As Mike noted, our branded promotional activity during the quarter was reduced relative to last year due to decisions made to better manage our limited inventory. And this resulted in our reported net price improvements. Even so, our fourth-quarter gross margins decreased relative to prior quarters primarily due to more expensive ocean freight flowing through to our P&L. Although slightly weaker than last summer, ocean rates have remained elevated entering 2025. We believe there is the potential for rates to decline as the picture on potential tariffs and the opening of the Suez Canal become clearer as the shippers add new capacity. We believe that current ocean rates are at unusually high levels relative to long-term averages, and therefore, we have only entered into limited twelve-month fixed-rate contracts to secure capacity and service on one lane where the service commitment is important to our reliability of supply. If we see competitive fixed-rate offers for long-term contracts that make sense to us, we would be willing to enter into more expansive fixed-rate agreements to cover more lanes. As we previously highlighted, last year we experienced significant inventory constraints, which led to unacceptable private label service levels that were below our standards. As a result of these challenges, we currently expect to lose some regions with certain private label retailers during 2025. Assuming this occurs, this will initially appear in our second-quarter shipments with deeper impact in subsequent quarters. These assumptions are built into our current forecast for full-year net sales. As Mike mentioned, we remain committed to competing for private label business and believe we have value to offer as a reliable, diversified partner to larger private label programs. And that long-term, we should be able to regain some of these losses. Based on the inventory we have in transit, and in-country to start the year, we are confident that we can generate strong growth in 2025 driven by mid to high teen branded growth offset by the expected weakness in private label shipments just mentioned. Capacity freed up should create more opportunities for our branded products in the second half of the year and into 2026. We believe that the strong category growth is a positive indicator and supportive of our long-term algorithm for branded growth. In anticipation of such growth, we have secured production capacity for 2025 and 2026 which should provide greater supply chain flexibility than we had in 2024. The new capacity supports our goal to operate with our expected demand at 80% to 85% of available full-year capacity. We expect to hit this production capacity level in the second half of 2025, which should give us more sourcing flexibility. While our fourth-quarter BrandScan performance in the US strengthened, it was not as strong as we believe it could have been as Walmart reset its stores during the quarter. The location of Vita Coco moved into the conventional shelf-stable juice set with some significant reduction in our SKUs in space, despite Vita Coco exhibiting very strong growth leading into the reset. This initially created mid-teen declines in weekly store sales at Walmart, which has hurt our total reported US scan performance. This has also produced outsized reported retail distribution declines accompanied by an improvement in sales per point of distribution. Long-term, we believe that the Juice Aisle has higher foot traffic than our old location, and that this move should benefit us greatly provided we can get the right SKUs on the shelf. We are currently working closely with Walmart to improve availability and visibility within the Juice Aisle. Approaching the normal reset timing for most retailers this spring, we believe that our initiatives will result in total net distribution improvement despite the short-term challenges at Walmart. Our confidence in the category and Vita Coco brand trends remains very high. We are projecting healthy net sales growth driven by strong branded sales for both international and the US, partially offset by the identified losses in private label of both oil and coconut water. We're projecting healthy adjusted EBITDA growth as well even though we expect slightly higher finished goods costs and higher average ocean freight rates for the year relative to 2024, especially in the first quarter of 2025. With that, I will turn the call over to Corey Baker, our Chief Financial Officer. Thanks, Martin, and good morning, everyone. I will now provide you with some additional details on the record 2024 financial results and our outlook for 2025. For the full year 2024, net sales increased $22 million or 5% year over year to $516 million driven by Vita Coco Coconut Water net sales growth of 10% partially offset by private label declines of 10%. As growth in private label water was offset by the transition of private label oil. On a segment basis, within the Americas, Vita Coco Coconut Water increased net sales by 8% to $343 million and private label decreased 13% to $90 million. Vita Coco Coconut Water saw a 5% volume increase and a 3% net price mix benefit. All private label sales decreased 13% driven by a 2% decrease in volume and an 11% price mix reduction due to the private label coconut oil transition. For the full year, 2024, our international segment net sales were up 16% with Vita Coco Coconut Water growth of 20% where we saw strong growth across our major markets. Private label sales increased 3% as strong sales of private label coconut water were partially offset by the transition out of private label coconut oil. On a full-year basis, consolidated gross profit was $199 million, an increase of $18 million versus the prior year. On a percentage basis, gross margin finished at 39% for the year, up approximately 191 basis points from the 37% reported in 2023. This increase in gross margins resulted from branded coconut water pricing and favorable mix. Moving on to operating expenses, 2024 SG&A costs increased slightly to $125 million driven by increased investments in people and resources focused on driving future growth and expanding our supply footprint. This was mostly offset by reduced marketing spend in light of supply challenges over the summer. Net income attributable to shareholders for the year was $56 million or $0.94 per diluted share, compared to $47 million or $0.79 per diluted share for the prior year. Net income benefited from higher gross profit and increased interest income partially offset by unrealized losses on FX derivatives and higher year-on-year taxes. Our effective tax rate for 2024 was 21%, versus 19% last year. The increase was driven by the jurisdictional mix of pretax profits with higher net state income expense than in the prior year and the impact of higher nondeductible expense this year related to covered employees' compensation compared to last year. 2024 adjusted EBITDA was $84 million or 16% of net sales, up from $68 million or 14% of net sales in 2023. The increase was primarily due to the increased gross profit previously discussed. Turning to our balance sheet and cash flow, as of December 31, 2024, we had total cash on hand of $165 million and no debt under our revolving credit facility, compared to $133 million of cash and no debt as of December 31, 2023. The increase in the cash position was due to the strong net income for the year partially offset by the increase of working capital of $34 million and the repurchase of shares valued at $12 million. The working capital increase was driven by an inventory build. Our higher end-inventory is representative of the health of our inventory levels as we enter 2025. We entered 2025 with a very strong category, healthy inventory levels, exciting innovation, and confidence in our team and our Vita Coco brand. While facing some headwinds, we are excited about our ability to continue to deliver strong results. We expect net sales between $555 million and $570 million, expected gross margins for the full year of 35% to 37%, delivering adjusted EBITDA of $86 million to $92 million. We're expecting the category to grow mid-teens this year with the Vita Coco brand tracking broadly with the category. As Martin indicated, we expect some reduction in private label service areas which will partially offset the expected mid-teens brand performance. We expect gross margins to be lower in the first half of the year as we continue to experience elevated ocean freight rates, and that gross margins will improve slightly in the second half as rates improve and they should benefit from the impact of a US branded pricing initiative designed to offset some of the cost inflation we're experiencing. In 2025, we expect the net pricing impact for the full year to be approximately flat as we return to a more normal promotional calendar in the second half of the year. We expect SG&A to increase to low to mid-single digits as we restore marketing reductions from last year and increase investments in people, supporting our continued capacity expansion, and the growth opportunity we see, specifically in international markets. This guidance reflects our current best assumptions on marketplace trends and our global supply chain performance. Finally, a word about the potential impact of tariffs. At this point, we have not included any impact from tariffs in our guidance. Obviously, the size of any potential tariffs and the countries to which they apply are critical to quantifying the impact on our business. As we have said before, if product import tariffs were applied to coconut water produced in the countries that we source from for any prolonged length of time, we would take pricing, expecting similar tariffs to impact our competitors and potentially other beverage categories. Our products are primarily sourced from the Philippines and Brazil, with additional sourcing in other Southeast Asian countries and co-packing facilities producing in Canada and Mexico. We believe this diversified network allows us to adjust as the relative economics change, but any adjustments have long lead times. To our long-term goal to grow the brand mid-teens. Just pulling back to this year in the more immediate time, I think you know, last year, the category in North America grew in the mid-teens, which is slightly ahead of what I just said. And actually, in the last thirteen weeks, it accelerated to the low twenties. And so we currently think we're seeing an acceleration of the category, whether that lasts for the full year or not is very difficult to say. I think in our assumptions for mid-teen branded growth, we're assuming that the category maintains a good solid mid-teen branded growth. But as I said, the category is currently accelerated ahead of that. And then when we talk about that, treats are sort of outside that because it's sort of a coconut milk-based product. So that's potentially incremental for our brand. As we look at international, we're trying to grow share in growing markets and we're trying to accelerate those markets and we're trying to add markets. So our hope would be that international would grow faster than our North American business. And then as it relates to your last question, you know, we're very much focused on growing the category, which is about education and trial, and then growing our households, which is about branded share gains and trying to make our brand more appealing than the other brands that are around us. And we do that through some of our social media marketing and innovation and then obviously retail execution is a very important driver of share and also of trial. And so that's what we're trying to do. And I think you know, what we've seen, you know, over the last five years is the category at least in North America where we have reasonable data through Numerator we've seen household growth rates that are pretty healthy and household buy rates that are pretty healthy that collectively, you know, combined to accomplish our growth rates in the last five years. And there's no reason why those can't continue. Household penetration, we believe, is still way less than other uses. Our household buy rate is still relatively low. And certainly, you have the old eighty-twenty rule where a lot of volume is drunk by twenty percent of your consumers. So there's a lot of opportunity to increase volume. So no. We feel very good about the category and very good about our brand prospects. Great. That's very helpful color. And maybe just one more, if you don't mind. On the distribution side, could you maybe touch on how much more distribution upside you see and maybe which channels you ultimately see the most opportunity in. And I think you alluded to, you know, maybe potential shelf cooler space gains and resets this year. So maybe just curious if you have any, you know, commentary on how much space you expect to gain this year. And thank you. Yeah. Just maybe limiting our comments to America and the America economic data, I'd refer you to slide ten in our investor deck where we sort of lay out our ACV, how it's changing, sort of how we think about it. We still have opportunities, you know, in food and an everyday presence. Have pretty good distribution in mass. Our big opportunity distribution opportunities are in convenience store, that said, we still have opportunities on multipacks in food more generally. We still have opportunity in multipacks in mass and in c-store we mentioned that we had launched one liter with a key retailer that was quite successful. C-Store has historically been a 500 ml. Sort of market. And so that provides us with and again, a nice runway to grow c-store. And then we have the innovation you know, like, Juice which is the canned product or, like, treats which is the coconut milk product which also should provide distribution. So both from innovation and with the core family. Opportunities. So we still have a fair amount of runway on that. Back to your question as to how we view things, I think we called out the Walmart reset with relates to the modern soda set that, you know, there's a lot of hyper wraparound. And we got relocated to the Juice Isle, resulting in some lost points of distribution at which has caused a drag on our scan data. And you can work out, you know, how big Walmart is relative to the rest of the universe. The Walmart trends are down, you know, double digits. And that's a pretty big lag on the on our actual main scan trends. So a pretty big drag on our top line right now. But certainly, we can weather it. We're growing the business even with that and we see it as a big opportunity because if we fix the distribution and I'll get the right product mix in that juice shelf, it's actually a high traffic shelf and it should be really good for us long term. So we're actually pretty excited about it, but we're weathering that first year and transition. And putting aside if you net if you include those, you know, distribution losses in that two set, reset. We still think we're gonna grow distribution this year. So on that understanding of retailers commitments to us is positive. Despite that drag. Very helpful. Thank you.