Thanks, Bob. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us to discuss our third quarter results. It's great to be with you again. When we recently gathered in New York for Investor Day, I said this was the start of a new era for Dollar Tree, Inc. One company, one brand, one focus. Our energy is now directed towards strengthening and growing the Dollar Tree, Inc. business. We delivered a high-quality quarter accompanied by mid-single-digit comps, above outlook earnings, and strong end-of-quarter momentum heading into the holidays. These results speak to our disciplined execution and focused strategy. Let me start by framing the quarter at a high level, then Stewart will take you through the financial details. First, I'd like to highlight the strength of our discretionary business, which showed its first positive year-over-year mix shift since 2022. We believe this strength illustrates how our exceptional value proposition, including our growing multi-price assortment, is resonating with our shoppers by helping them meet their needs and desires in the budget-constrained environment that many consumers find themselves in today. The three pillars that define Dollar Tree, Inc. are value, convenience, and discovery. Those are not slogans. They're how we win. They describe a brand that offers customers compelling values across a variety of price points that help them do more with less, in stores that are easy to shop and full of surprises worth discovering. While the consumer landscape remains uneven, the underlying story remains consistent. All consumers are seeking value. Marrying that value-seeking behavior with convenience and discovery is the intersection where Dollar Tree, Inc. thrives. And the evidence is clear. Dollar Tree, Inc. continues to gain share and attract new shoppers while continuing to serve its large and loyal base of core customers. Today, we serve an increasingly broad spectrum of shoppers, from core value-focused households to middle and higher-income shoppers who are making deliberate choices about how and where they spend. We had 3 million more households shop with us in Q3 this year compared to Q3 last year. Approximately 60% of these incremental shoppers came from higher-income households, those earning over $100,000, and 30% from middle-income households, those earning between $60,000 to $100,000, with the rest from lower-income households, those earning under $60,000. Importantly, Q3 spending growth was broad-based across all income sub-cohorts, including households earning below $20,000. To us, this demonstrates that Dollar Tree, Inc. isn't just for tough times or for those with limited resources. Dollar Tree, Inc. is for smart shoppers across all income brackets where value, convenience, and discovery matter. At the same time, higher-income households are trading into Dollar Tree, Inc., and lower-income households are depending on us more than ever. For example, the average spend for lower-income households grew more than twice as fast in the third quarter as the average spend for higher-income households. While part of this reflects the fact that higher-income households are typically earlier in their customer lifecycle with us, the data clearly shows that our core customer remains loyal and deeply engaged. She's balancing her household budget carefully and continues to count on Dollar Tree, Inc. for essentials and increasingly for the seasonal and discretionary items that bring joy to her and her family. Over time, our goal is to inspire the same level of loyalty in our newer higher-income customers that we see in our core customers. While the average per household spend for our higher-income customers is currently lower, even given their higher income, larger average basket size, and ability to spend more, this is a simple function of trip frequency. Because many of our higher-income customers are still early in their relationship with Dollar Tree, Inc., their purchase frequency has significant room to grow. Over time, we believe that growing trip frequency among these higher-income customers, given their propensity to build bigger baskets, will be a powerful growth driver for Dollar Tree, Inc. This is why our brand promise matters so much right now. We make it easier for customers to do more with less, without trading down on quality or experience. And that is what keeps our traffic and baskets healthy in a cautious consumer environment. And with that, let's take a look at some of our Q3 highlights. Comparable sales increased 4.2%, a nice acceleration from the quarter-to-date trend of 3.8% we shared in mid-October. As the results suggest, October finished strong, driven by momentum in our multi-price assortment and a great Halloween. Our Q3 comp was all ticket-driven, as traffic was slightly negative. Discretionary mix improved 40 basis points to 50.5%. Comp increased 4.8% in discretionary and 3.5% in consumables. Gross margin performance exceeded expectations, reflecting strong operational execution and cost discipline. Adjusted EPS of $1.21 was nicely above our outlook, and Stewart will go through the drivers behind this upside in his remarks. We believe these results reflect our sharper focus and more disciplined execution. Multi-price was a key driver of our Q3 momentum. As a reminder, multi-price is a deliberate long-term data-driven strategy that began back in 2019 to make Dollar Tree, Inc. more relevant, flexible, and profitable. Multi-price is about evolving our assortment over time to include new, more relevant, and attractively valued items that we could not offer at a fixed price point of $1 or $1.25. Multi-price is one of the most important strategic shifts in Dollar Tree, Inc.'s modern history. And it's working. As we highlighted at our Investor Day, the roughly 5.5% annual comp we've averaged since breaking the dollar in 2022 is among the very best in all of retail. Those of you who attended our Investor Day may recall a slide from Stewart's presentation where he demonstrated how expanded multi-price penetration in categories like electronics, hardware, and Easter had a meaningfully positive impact on sales and per unit profitability. We've reproduced a similar analysis on our multi-price Halloween assortment this year, which we've included in our supplemental presentation available on our Investor Relations website. Our Halloween performance this year is another clear example of the power of multi-price. This year, our Halloween assortment generated over $200 million in sales, an all-time record. But to see the full impact of multi-price, let's go back to Halloween 2022 when multi-price was still in its infancy. That year, multi-price represented about 3% of units sold, 10% of sales, and 7% of merchandise gross margin across our full Halloween assortment. Fast forward to 2025. On a 25% larger base of sales, where multi-price accounted for roughly a quarter of our total Halloween sales and merchandise gross margin, but only 8% of Halloween units sold. We are continually engineering incremental value and profitability drivers into our multi-price assortment. Across Halloween this year, each multi-price item that we sold generated 3.5 times more profit than each non-multi-price item we sold. This is a full turn higher than Halloween 2022. By combining this increase per unit profitability with a higher multi-price mix, we were able to generate approximately 25% more margin dollars from our Halloween assortment this year compared to 2022, while selling approximately 10% fewer units. And this is just the positive impact on merchandise margin. It doesn't take into consideration any labor or distribution cost savings that come from handling fewer units. Looking at it this way, multi-price is a powerful growth and profitability driver. It broadens our value proposition and relevance to our customers, allows us to compete more effectively, helps drive cost leverage, and sets the business up for long-term success. More importantly, we are just getting started. Multi-price is not a one-and-done proposition. We expect these dynamics to play out across every holiday and special occasion and strengthen as our multi-price penetration expands. Over time, our customers will let us know what the right multi-price mix ultimately is. But we're confident that it's meaningfully higher than where we are today. So let's take a look at some broader merchandising highlights from the quarter. Discretionary categories accelerated through the quarter, with standout performances in party and home decor. Consumables were steady, led by household cleaning, personal care, snacks, and cookies. Seasonal performance was strong, particularly towards the end of the quarter. We planned the inventory carefully, had strong in-store execution, and are pleased with our sell-through. Those wins are proof points for our merchandising strategy and ever-changing, more relevant assortment that drives trip completion and, more importantly, enhances profitability and margin performance. Today, with a wider assortment of multi-price merchandise and re-stickering largely complete, 85% of the items in our store are still priced at $2 or below. Offering a broad range of price points while staying firmly grounded in value preserves the integrity of the Dollar Tree, Inc. brand. We believe time, convenience, pack size, and quality are all part of our customers' value calculation. And so is an expanded range of products that address a wide range of shopping occasions. When a customer can fill a basket with snacks, cleaning supplies, home decor items, and seasonal products all at a great value, that's when the Dollar Tree, Inc. magic is on full display. Q3 results were also powered by strong execution in our stores, supply chain, and support functions. At Investor Day, Jossi Conrad spoke about our commitment to simplify work, elevate standards, and empower our people. In Q3, we saw measurable improvement in these key areas. On store standards, we've rolled out new tools and training that simplify store routines and improve accountability. The results are visible with cleaner aisles, stocked shelves, and faster checkouts, with more to come. On associate engagement, our Race to Gold initiative continues to gain traction. As we've increased our investment in training and career progression, we've seen continued improvement in turnover. In Supply Chain, the network is performing at a very high level. Service levels and in-stocks coming out of this year's peak season are among the highest we've seen, and our planned increases in distribution capacity over the next several years should allow us to unlock even greater operating efficiencies and distribution cost savings. In technology, we continue to modernize our back-office systems and upgrade store infrastructure. These investments are simplifying work and enabling smarter decision-making in merchandising and replenishment. All of this comes down to one thing: making it easier for our teams to deliver a consistently great experience for our customers. With the Family Dollar sale behind us, we are already seeing measurable improvements in our culture and performance. We are fully aligned behind one brand, one set of priorities, and one mission. With leadership and investment focus concentrated on growing Dollar Tree, Inc. Every decision across product, stores, technology, supply chain, and people is aligned to strengthening one business. That alignment brings speed and accountability. Teams test, learn, and scale faster. And we now measure progress across a single set of metrics directly tied to creating shareholder value. We are moving forward with purpose, clarity, and conviction guided by the five strategic priorities we laid out at our Investor Day. Surprise and delight our customer with an expanded, more relevant assortment, manage expenses with agility by controlling the cost of the goods we sell and managing our SG&A with discipline to drive operating leverage and profitability. Create a strong connection with our customers, with cost-effective, quick-return, data-driven marketing, open more stores and improve the condition of our fleet, and finally, improve the in-store experience for our customers by raising the bar on our store standards. At the foundation of these priorities are a fast, flexible, and efficient supply chain and disciplined financial management that focuses on high-return investments and smart capital allocation. And at the forefront of our success is our people. The more than 150,000 associates who show up every day to serve our customers, support their colleagues, and strengthen the communities where we operate. They are the reason we do what we do and the driving force behind every decision we make. As you heard me emphasize at Investor Day, we manage this business with a focus on what I call the say-do ratio. Making clear commitments and delivering on those commitments. This mindset builds trust and accountability across the organization, and we believe that maintaining alignment between what we say and what we do is how we deliver consistent performance over time. In summary, we are pleased with our Q3 results. We're building a stronger foundation for the future, and we're confident about the direction we're heading. With that, I'll turn it over to Stewart.