Thank you, Shuky, and hello everyone. Thank you for joining us, and Jimmy, best of success. To begin, I'm pleased with our solid financial performance for the first fiscal quarter as summarized on slide 17. Q1 revenue of approximately $1.156 billion was up 3.5% year-over-year in constant currency. Revenue was slightly above the midpoint of our guidance even after unfavorable foreign currency movements of roughly $3 million compared to our guidance assumptions. On a reported basis, revenue was up 4.1% from a year ago. Revenue from the acquisition of Matrix Software was immaterial in Q1 since the deal closed in the last week of the quarter. On a regional basis, North America was up nearly 4% from a year ago and was higher on a sequential basis for the fourth consecutive quarter. Europe was up by 17% year-over-year and increased by 1% sequentially, driven by organic growth initiatives and the December 2024 acquisition of Profinet, which made little contribution to the year-ago quarter. Rest of the world was down from a year ago but improved slightly as compared to the prior quarter. Consistent with our prior guidance, our strong sales momentum provides clear visibility to continued growth in Rest of the World this year. Let me remind you that quarterly trends may fluctuate given the project orientation of our customer activities in this region. Shifting down the income statement, non-GAAP operating margin of 21.6% improved by 40 basis points from a year ago and was stable on a sequential basis as we continue to balance the benefits of internal cost and efficiency initiatives with investments designed to accelerate our long-term growth, including the development of our next-generation AI platform. Interest and other expenses amounted to roughly $10 million in Q1. On the bottom line, non-GAAP diluted EPS of $1.81 was above the guidance range, primarily due to a lower than expected non-GAAP effective tax rate in the quarter. Similarly, diluted GAAP EPS of $1.45 exceeded the guidance range, which was also primarily due to a lower than expected GAAP effective tax rate in the quarter. Additionally, diluted GAAP EPS included a restructuring charge of roughly $0.09 per share, which was not included in our guidance for the quarter. Turning to Slide 18, Managed Services revenue of $746 million was up 2.3% from the prior year in the first fiscal quarter. As a share of total revenue, managed services accounted for roughly 65%, consistent with the last several quarters. During Q1, we maintained very high managed services renewal rates, signing expanded multiyear engagements, which together strengthen our business resiliency. In addition to the new agreement with T-Mobile and the new engagement with Vodafone Germany, we signed an agreement with Telefonica Mobile Argentina to operate water maintenance services, application managed services, and our software factory. Moving to the balance sheet and cash flow highlights on slide 19, DSO of 76 days decreased by five days from a year ago and was up by two days sequentially. Unbilled receivables net of deferred revenue was down by $32 million sequentially and by $6 million versus a year ago in Q1, aggregating the short-term and long-term balances. As a reminder, the net difference between unbilled receivables and deferred revenue fluctuates from quarter to quarter in line with normal business activities as well as our progress on multiyear engagements. Free cash flow before restructuring payments was $237 million in Q1, driven by strong earnings to cash conversion to begin the year. In fact, Q1 free cash flow already equates to roughly 33% of our full-year target, which is higher than usual after just one quarter. Including restructuring payments of $49 million, reported free cash flow was $188 million in the quarter. We ended Q1 with a healthy cash balance of approximately $248 million and aggregate borrowings of roughly $780 million, including a drawdown of $130 million on our $500 million revolving credit facility to fund the acquisition of Matrix Software, and our $650 million senior notes, which mature in June 2030. Overall, we have ample liquidity to support our ongoing business needs while retaining the capacity to fund our future strategic growth. Switching to capital allocation on slide 20, this quarter, we repurchased $146 million of our shares. We had up to $840 million of remaining repurchase authority as of December 31, 2025. We paid cash dividends of $57 million in the first fiscal quarter. Looking to fiscal 2026, we are on track to generate free cash flow of between $710 million to $730 million, not including payments we expect to make under our current restructuring program. Our free cash flow outlook equates to a conversion rate of roughly 90% relative to expected non-GAAP net income and translates to a healthy free cash flow yield of roughly 8% relative to Amdocs' current market capitalization. Regarding our capital allocations for the coming year, we expect to return the majority of our free cash flow to shareholders. Moving to slide 21, 12-month backlog was $4.25 billion at the end of Q1, up $60 million sequentially and 2.7% from a year ago. Now turning to our revenue outlook on slide 22, we are continuing to closely monitor the prevailing level of macroeconomic, geopolitical, business, and operational uncertainty in the current business environment. The second quarter and full fiscal year 2026 financial guidance reflects what we consider to be the most likely outcome based on the information we have today, but we cannot predict all possible scenarios. For the full fiscal year 2026, we expect revenue growth of between 1.5% and 5.5% as reported, roughly half of which will be inorganic in nature. This includes the acquisition of Matrix Software, which was already incorporated in our assumptions when we provided our fiscal 2026 guidance last quarter. This expected range compares with 1.75% to 5.7% previously, with the change reflecting foreign currency movements which are now assumed to provide the benefit of 0.5% for the full year as compared to 0.7% previously. For the full fiscal year 2026, we are reiterating our outlook for revenue growth of between 1.5% and 5.5% in constant currency. As for the second fiscal quarter, we expect revenue of between $1.15 billion to $1.19 billion. Moving down the income statement, we are on track to deliver non-GAAP operating margins within our target range of 21.3% to 21.9% in fiscal 2026, the midpoint of which is roughly 20 basis points higher than the prior year of 21.4%. Our profitability outlook reflects an intentional decision to accelerate our R&D, sales, and marketing investments with respect to generative AI and our next-gen agentic operating system, while balancing this with ongoing cost and efficiency gains resulting from our continuous focus on operational excellence, automation, and the internal deployment of generative AI-based tools across our business. As a reminder, our non-GAAP operating margin may fluctuate slightly on a quarter-to-quarter basis. Additionally, our margin outlook excludes additional restructuring charges we may take. Below the operating line, we expect non-GAAP net interest and other expenses to be impacted by higher finance costs this year, resulting from a reduced cash balance and funding of our strategic long-term growth plan. As anticipated at the beginning of the year, we expect our non-GAAP effective tax rate to be within an annual target range of 16% to 19% for the full fiscal year 2026. For your modeling purposes, in Q2 specifically, we expect our non-GAAP effective tax rate to be above the high end of this annual range. Bringing everything together on slide 24, we are reiterating our outlook for non-GAAP diluted earnings per share growth of 4% to 8% in fiscal 2026, the midpoint of which positions us to deliver high single-digit expected total shareholder return, when including our dividend yield of around 2.7%. With that, back to you, Shuky.