Thank you, Clint, and good afternoon, everyone. As Clint highlighted, the fourth quarter completed a strong year for Columbia Banking System, Inc. On an operating basis, which excludes merger expense and other items detailed in our non-GAAP disclosure, fourth quarter pre-provision net revenue and operating net income increased 27% and 19% respectively compared to the prior quarter, while full-year 2025 results rose 23% compared to 2024. These improvements reflect four months of operating as a combined company following our acquisition of PAC Premier, as well as our continued emphasis on balance sheet optimization and disciplined expense management. Focusing on the fourth quarter, we reported EPS of $0.72 and operating EPS of $0.82, increases of 6% and 15%, respectively, from the prior year's fourth quarter. Net interest margin expansion and the corresponding increase in net interest income was a key driver of earnings performance. Net interest margin was 4.06% for the fourth quarter, up from 3.84% for the third quarter and 3.64% for 2024. Slide 19 of our earnings presentation outlines the contributors to the 22 basis points sequential quarter expansion, with improved funding performance serving as a primary factor alongside continued earning asset optimization. Having reduced wholesale funding by nearly $2 billion during the third quarter, the fourth quarter results reflect the full benefit of these actions alongside two additional months of operating as a combined company. Net interest income during the fourth quarter also benefited from $12 million in premium amortization related to acquired time deposits, which we anticipated and highlighted last quarter, and $5 million from an accelerated loan repayment, contributing a combined 11 basis points to the margin. The premium on time deposits was fully amortized as of year-end, and it will not repeat in 2026. Noninterest income was very strong in Q4, with $90 million on a GAAP basis and $88 million on an operating basis as detailed on Slide 21. Of the $16 million sequential quarter increase in operating noninterest income, $13 million reflects two additional months of PAC Premier, and the remaining $3 million was driven by higher customer fee income, most notably in swap and syndication banking revenue, representing a high watermark for those revenue streams. Slide 22 outlines noninterest expense, which was $373 million on an operating basis. Of the $66 million sequential quarter increase, $62 million relates to PAC Premier inclusive of cost savings. As of year-end, we achieved $63 million in annualized deal-related cost savings, or approximately 50% of the targeted $127 million. Although these savings were not fully run-rated in the fourth quarter's result, excluding CDI amortization expense of $42 million, operating noninterest expense of $331 million was at the lower end of our $330 million to $340 million range that we signaled in our last call. Certain investments fell back into 2026 from a timing perspective. Flipping back to slides 16 and 17, provision expense was $23 million for the fourth quarter, reflecting low portfolio loan portfolio runoff, credit migration trends, and changes in the economic forecast used in our credit models. Our credit metrics remain stable and healthy, and our allowance for credit losses was 1.02% of loans at quarter-end and 1.32% of loan balances when the credit discount on acquired loans is factored in. Continuing with the balance sheet, our investment securities portfolio is outlined on slide 11. The portfolio increased by approximately $100 million during the fourth quarter. We purchased $246 million of securities at a weighted average base yield of 4.52%, partially offset by paydowns. Gross loans and leases were $47.8 billion as of December 31, down from $48.5 billion as of September 30, as we continue to allow below-market rate transactional loan balances to decline alongside declines in our CRE construction and development portfolio. Chris will discuss loan portfolio trends in greater detail shortly. Total deposits were $54.2 billion as of December 31, compared to $55.8 billion as of September 30. During the fourth quarter, we intentionally reduced brokered and select public deposits, which collectively declined by over $650 million as alternative funding sources offered more attractive rates. Seasonal customer outflows, which Chris will discuss, also contributed to the decline. To supplement funding, term debt increased to $3.2 billion as of December 31. Slides 20 and 25 review funding flows, our balance sheet sensitivity to interest rate changes, and maturity and repricing schedules. Turning to capital, slide 18 highlights our expanding ratios supported by net capital generation and balance sheet optimization. During the fourth quarter, we increased our common dividend to $0.37 per share from $0.36 per share and repurchased 3.7 million common shares at an average price point of $27.07. Even with the execution of our buyback activity, we saw CET1 and total risk-based capital ratios increase to 11.8% and 13.6%, respectively, as of December 31. Tangible book value increased to $19.11 as of December 31, up 3% from the prior quarter and 11% from the prior year. Looking forward, we expect net interest margin in the first quarter to land in a range from 3.9% to 3.95%, consistent with what we indicated on our last call. This change reflects the absence of the 11 basis point benefit in the fourth quarter from acquired CD premium amortization and the accelerated loan repayment activity that I discussed earlier, as well as higher wholesale balances added to the balance sheet in the latter part of December resulting from seasonal deposit flows. After bottoming out in the first quarter, we expect net interest margin to trend higher each quarter throughout 2026 as customer deposit balances rebound and balance sheet optimization actions continue to improve profitability, ultimately surpassing 4% net interest margin in the second or third quarter of the year. As we saw this past quarter, our continued balance sheet optimization activity may lead to earning asset contraction during the first quarter. We have maintained a conservative level of excess liquidity following the Pacific Premier acquisition, and we may reduce excess cash to further optimize our funding structure by repaying wholesale sources. Following these actions, we expect the balance sheet size to remain relatively stable, with commercial loan growth offsetting contraction in the transactional portfolio. Excluding CDI amortization, we expect noninterest expense to remain in the $335 to $345 million range in the first and second quarters, before declining modestly in the third quarter as we realize all cost savings related to Pacific Premier by the end of Q2. CDI amortization will average around $40 million per quarter. We expect to increase share repurchase activity to a range of $150 million to $200 million per quarter in 2026. $600 million remains authorized under our current plan. We ended the year with over $600 million in excess capital on our most constrained measure. Overall, we are very pleased with the financial results for the fourth quarter, driving over 1.4% ROAA and over 17% return on tangible common equity, and we feel very well positioned to continue to drive strong profitability as we move into 2026. I will now hand the call over to Chris.