Thanks, Brian. And good afternoon, everyone. As Brian shared, the fourth quarter was a strong quarter for Coinbase Global, Inc., and we wrapped up a great year. I am proud that we executed on our three financial priorities. We diversified our revenue, we generated positive adjusted EBITDA, and we maintained operating discipline while we invested opportunistically to achieve our business goals. Let's dive into our results. All comparisons I make will be on a quarter-over-quarter basis unless I note otherwise. Starting with the macro backdrop, crypto markets rallied subsequent to the US elections, given the election of the most pro-crypto congress and president in history. Underpinning this, in the quarter, we saw average crypto market cap increase 33% and crypto asset volatility increase 27%. With this backdrop, our Q4 total trading volume was $439 billion, up 137%. Our consumer trading volume was $94 billion, up 176%, and we outperformed the US spot market, which increased 126%. As Brian shared, this was an all-time high. Consumer transaction revenue was $1.3 billion, up 179%. We saw strong growth in both simple and advanced trading volume. Our mix of consumer trading volume was very similar in Q4 as compared to Q3. During the quarter, we listed 13 new assets, including popular meme coins. Further, we invested in trading experience improvements, platform stability, and collectively these efforts, in addition to the market conditions, drove our MTU growth of nearly 24%, up to 9.7 million MTUs. Nearly half of our trading customers in the fourth quarter were either new to Coinbase Global, Inc. or resurrected from over a year ago. And we are pleased to see these market participants come into the space. Our institutional trading volume was $345 billion, up 128%, also outperforming the US spot market. Institutional transaction revenue was $141 million, up 156%. In the fourth quarter, we saw strong adoption of the Prime product suite across custody, trading, financing, and staking. Our top clients are engaged with most of these products in 2024, and our onboarding pipeline remains robust. Our Prime financing product had all-time high loan balances in the fourth quarter in connection with the strong market conditions, and we see elevated trading amongst clients who are using financing. Turning to our subscription and services revenue, which reached $641 million, up 15%. Our revenue growth was driven by higher asset prices and USDC market cap, as well as native unit inflows across staking, custody, and the USDC within our products. I want to touch on two points within subscription and services. First, our stablecoin revenue declined $21 million or 9%. We are super pleased to see USDC market cap increase and our on-platform balances grew substantially during the quarter. However, the lower interest rate environment and the impact of new USDC ecosystem participants more than offset this growth. Second, other subscription and services revenue grew $33 million or 56%. This was largely driven by Coinbase One. In early December, we announced Coinbase One exceeded 600,000 paid members, and we have continued to see strong growth since then. Switching to expenses. Total Q4 operating expenses were $1.2 billion, up 19%. Our expense growth primarily was driven by higher transaction expenses in connection with higher trading activity. Technology and development, general and administrative, and sales and marketing collectively grew by over $84 million or 10% quarter-over-quarter due to high performance marketing spend, higher USDC rewards, and some policy-related spend in the quarter as we pursued advocacy efforts within the US. Our fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA was $1.3 billion, and net income was also $1.3 billion. Net income benefited by a $476 million in pretax gains on our crypto asset investment portfolio. The vast majority of this gain was unrealized. I want to note that on an after-tax basis, this represented $357 million of gains. Lastly, our USD resources grew to $9.3 billion by the end of the year. Our strong balance sheet gives us the resources and flexibility to invest in the business, provides capacity for acquisitions, enables us to invest in more crypto assets, or opportunistically address the capital structure via share or debt repurchases. Generally, we believe building a strong balance sheet provides us maximum optionality to capitalize on whatever opportunity we find as they arise. Before we get to Outlook, I want to highlight one important change in disclosure. In January, the SEC issued staff accounting bulletin 120, which rescinded the Gensler era SAB 121. In turn, it required us to record customer crypto assets and liabilities on our consolidated balance sheet. We early adopted SAB 122, which repealed SAB 121, and it reverses that requirement. As such, we are no longer reporting safeguarded customer assets and safeguarded liabilities on our balance sheet. In its place, we have reinstated assets on platform as a key business metric, which reports the amount of crypto and USDC we are securely storing on behalf of our customers. The only material change is the location of where we disclose customer assets in our audited financial statements. No change to our operational and legal processes of securely storing customer assets, no change to our obligations or risks. As of December 31st, we had $404 billion in total assets on platform, approximately 12% of total crypto market cap. You can see that our assets on platform is included in an audited footnote within our financial statements. Okay. Finally, I'll close with a few comments on our outlook. For Q1, we've had a strong start to the year and have generated roughly $750 million in transaction revenue year to date. We expect Q1 subscription and services revenue to grow sequentially and be in the range of $685 to $765 million. We expect growth to be driven by higher stablecoin revenue, continued growth of Coinbase One subscribers, and the higher average crypto asset prices we have seen so far in the quarter. With regards to stablecoin revenue, Brian mentioned earlier our stretch goal to make USDC the number one dollar stablecoin. I think it's important to note that we hope to achieve this over the next few years. We expect Q1 technology and development and general administrative expenses to be in the range of $750 million to $800 million. On sales and marketing, we expect the range to be between $235 to $375 million. Where we fall in this range will largely depend on whether we continue to see attractive performance marketing opportunities and the product USDC balances, which drives USDC rewards. With that, Danielle, let's go to questions.