Welcome to our Q1 fiscal '25 earnings call. I'll start with a review of our Q1 performance and then discuss our future outlook. Our CFO, Dan Fleming, will then provide detailed Q1 results and share expectations for Q2. For Q1, Credo reported revenue of $59.7 million and non-GAAP gross margin of 62.9%. Our product revenues of $57.3 million were up 30% compared to the prior quarter, establishing a new quarterly record for the company. Product revenues were driven by rapidly expanding AI deployments. Credo is a pure-play high-speed connectivity company. We deliver a differentiated set of solutions, including active electrical cables or AECs, Optical DSPs, Line Card PHYs, SerDes Chiplets and SerDes IP licenses or Ethernet port speeds ranging from 100 gig up to 1.6 terabits per second. The data center market is dynamic and evolving rapidly, which we believe will create even more opportunities for Credo. Although we are primarily targeting the leading hyperscalers, we are now observing increased spending by the next tier of data center operators. We see a group of emerging hyperscalers deploying an increasing amount of infrastructure to take advantage of opportunities presented by AI. With these customers, we find we have immediate credibility from our prior success with traditional hyperscalers and that has indeed helped us to win new programs across our product lines. This is translating into material revenue across several growing customers. Notably, we expect to see a new 10% customer in Q2. Credo aims to extend its reach into new markets as data rates rise. Later this year, we intend to enter the 64 gig PAM4 PCIe Gen 6 market offering Retimer and AEC solutions that are optimized for signal integrity, latency, power efficiency and cost effectiveness. Now regarding our AEC product line, during the first quarter, AEC has continued to be our main source of revenue and we anticipate that AECs will play a crucial role in driving growth in fiscal '25 and beyond. Today, we're in production with solutions for port speeds up to 800 gig and we expect to deliver power optimized 3-nanometer products in 2025 for the 1.6T port market. We've delivered AECs in a wide variety of form factors and with a range of functionality designed to meet the diverse needs of our customers. We think our approach of offering system-level products blending customized hardware and software with fast turnaround time is crucial to maintaining our competitive edge. And as a result, we've developed deep relationships with our customers to deliver very innovative AEC solutions. Based on these customer relationships, market feedback and the inherent advantages of AECs compared to alternative solutions, we have seen AECs become the de facto solution for in-rack connectivity at 50 gig per lane speeds and above. In addition, increasing rack power densities and the migration to liquid cooling are effectively reducing the physical length required for backend network connections and thereby increasing the opportunity for AECs. During Q1, our existing and new customer relationships continue to expand and develop providing us with more confidence in the growth prospects of our AEC business going forward. Given that, we continue to expect our ramp of AECs to drive an inflection point in our sequential growth in the back half of fiscal '25. Now I'll turn to our Optical DSP business. I'm pleased to report we're making continued progress with our optical DSP business on multiple fronts. With AI deployments accelerating adoption of Credo solutions. Our optical module customers shipped AOCs and transceivers based on Credo DSPs to both US and international end customers. Based on Q1 results and our outlook, we remain on track to achieve our goal for Optical DSPs to be at least 10% of our fiscal '25 revenue. Beyond our existing production programs, we remain excited about future growth prospects in this category for several reasons. We are currently working with numerous optical module manufacturers to develop AOCs and transceivers and notably, we've secured our first design win with an industry-leading module manufacturer. Last fall, Credo introduced the concept of LRO or Linear Receive Optics which maintains a DSP only in the transmit path of an optical module as an innovative way to reduce power in both 800 gig and 1.6T optics. The LRO concept is increasingly being adopted within the industry and a new hyperscaler has decided to implement this strategy in their architecture. This application will target 800 gig module power of less than 10 watts, significantly below the typical 15 watts seen with full DSP architectures. We expect to start seeing LRO deployments in calendar '25. At 800 gig and 1.6T port speeds, we see energy efficiency becoming a more critical factor as power delivery and cooling infrastructure becomes even more challenging. Notably, power efficiency drove our decision to move directly to 3-nanometer for Credo's 1.6T DSPs and we plan to tape out power optimized solutions with both full DSP and LRO options later this calendar year. Taking into account customer feedback and rising momentum, we anticipate sustained growth in our optical business. Now regarding our Line Card PHY business. In the first quarter, our Line Card PHY business was once again an important contributor to our overall product revenue growth driven by strong contributions from 400 gig and 800 gig solutions. Our Line Card PHY revenue comes from Retimer and MACsec encryption products for port speeds up to 1.6 terabits per second. In this segment, our customers include networking OEMs for traditional switching applications and more recently, server ODMs for emerging AI appliance applications. We see new demand for our Line Card PHY solutions within Ethernet-based AI appliances for scale-out networks as rapidly increasing GPU performance places greater signal integrity demands inside the server. These emerging opportunities combined with traditional switch opportunities should lead to TAM growth into the future for our Line Card PHY solutions. Lastly, I'll review our SerDes licensing and chiplet businesses. We continue to make progress with customers and expand our funnel within our SerDes IP licensing and chiplet businesses. For fiscal '25, while we continue to expect quarterly variability due to the nature of revenue recognition, we see growth opportunities driven by a combination of license, royalty and chiplet revenues. With connectivity speeds rising fueled mainly by the needs of AI applications, Credo is poised for future growth. We offer a wide range of SerDes solutions up to 224 gig speeds in a wide range of process geometries from 28 nanometer to 3-nanometer. We continue to win due to our compelling combination of performance, power and exceptional technical support. To summarize, I'm very pleased with our team's performance in Q1, specifically in terms of the strong execution of our product ramp and our ongoing success engaging with customers. The rise of generative AI is driving greater demand for cutting-edge, power-efficient, high-speed connectivity solutions and Credo is dedicated to advancing our range of solutions to address this growing demand. This month, Credo will have strong presence at the CIOE Optical Conference in Shenzhen, followed by the ECOC Optical Conference in Germany. We expect these events will add to the momentum we've built since OFC in March. And next month, we'll be very visible at the OCP conference in Silicon Valley showcasing a wide array of advanced solutions for AI clusters. Moving forward, we continue to see an inflection point in the second half of fiscal '25 driven by existing and new customer engagements across the entire range of our connectivity solutions. I'll now turn the call over to our CFO, Dan Fleming, and he will provide additional details.