Thank you, Jamie. I'll start with our financial highlights for the fourth quarter. GMV grew over 8% to $21.2 billion. Revenue grew over 13% to $2.96 billion. Our non-GAAP operating income grew over 11% year-over-year to $775 million. Non-GAAP earnings per share grew nearly 13% year-over-year to $1.41 and we returned $756 million to shareholders through repurchases and cash dividends, demonstrating our continued commitment to capital returns. Now let's go deeper into the key drivers behind our strong Q4 performance. GMV grew over 8% to $21.2 billion on an organic FX-neutral basis. Foreign exchange provided a tailwind of approximately 150 basis points to spot GMV growth. Focus category GMV grew over 16% in Q4, outpacing the remainder of our marketplace by roughly 12 percentage points. Consistent with recent quarters, strength was broad-based across our business and was most pronounced in the areas where we have been actively investing. All focus categories contributed positively to GMV growth in the quarter, led by collectibles, P&A, luxury, refurbished apparel and sneakers. Within trading cards, while Pokemon decelerated as expected due to tougher year-over-year comparisons, GMV from the rest of collectible card games still posted strong growth and sports trading cards growth accelerated. Outside of focus categories, we also saw strong GMV growth in other collectibles like bullion, coins, action figures, comics and other toys. Looking at our business by geography. Our U.S. GMV growth was particularly strong, while our international performance was pressured by the relatively softer macro environment in Europe, and continued pressure on U.S. imports driven by recent trade policy changes. U.S. GMV grew nearly 19%, accelerating by nearly 6 points sequentially due to several factors. Our U.S. volume saw a disproportionate benefit from the strength in collectibles because of its higher mix in this category. Our U.S. business also benefited from strong growth in luxury and pre-loved apparel and an uptick in demand in certain electronics categories. Growing contributions from our emerging growth vectors, notably live and vehicles also benefited our U.S. growth as well as a favorable lower funnel marketing environment and continued strength from our Klarna partnership. International GMV declined nearly 1% on an organic FX-neutral basis with foreign exchange providing a tailwind of 290 basis points to spot GMV growth. International performance was impacted by challenging macroeconomic conditions in the U.K. and Germany and a deceleration in our cross-border volume growth due to U.S. trade policies, including the removal of de minimis exemption for all countries at the end of August. However, our focus categories continued to perform well internationally in Q4, reinforcing the resilience of our marketplace. Moving on to our buyer metrics. Our trailing 12-month active buyers totaled roughly 135 million in Q4. Excluding buyers from recently acquired Tise, active buyers were over 134 million up nearly 1% year-over-year organically. Enthusiast buyers were stable at roughly 16 million while spend per enthusiast buyer grew year-over-year to over $3,300 on a trailing 12-month basis. Our buyer metrics also reflected the divergence in our geographical performance. In the U.S., both active and enthusiast buyer growth accelerated in 2025, exiting the year at mid-single-digit growth. However, our enthusiast buyer count in international markets has been pressured by persistent macro headwinds as some buyers fell below the volume or frequency thresholds. Next, let's take a closer look at our income statement. We generated revenue of $2.96 billion in the fourth quarter, up over 13% on an organic FX-neutral basis with foreign exchange providing a tailwind of 160 basis points to spot growth. Our take rate was 14%, up 60 basis points year-over-year primarily due to the shipping, U.K. buyer protection fee, and advertising revenue growth. As a reminder, we eliminated final value fees for U.K. C2C sellers as a part of our C2C initiative in October of 2024, then progressively scaled our remonetization throughout 2025. By Q4, we had effectively completed our C2C remonetization efforts through our buyer protection fee and manage shipping mandate on eligible items. Trade policy changes and mix shifts in our business continue to apply some pressure on our take rate year-over-year. Last quarter, we noted returned and canceled orders had emerged as a headwind to our take rate in recent months. Encouragingly, we did see return in cancellation rates stabilize sequentially in Q4 as sellers and buyers adjusted to U.S. trade policies. Total advertising revenue was $544 million, representing GMV penetration of nearly 2.6%. Within the eBay platform, first-party ads grew over 17% to $517 million. Promoted listings comprised nearly 1.2 billion of the roughly 2.5 billion total listings on eBay while 4.8 million sellers adopted at least 1 promoted listing product during the quarter. We continue to deprecate legacy third-party display ads, which declined by 41% to $7 million. Off-platform advertising revenue was $21 million. Non-GAAP gross margin was 72.1% in Q4, declining by nearly 80 basis points year-over-year as tax-related tailwinds and cost of payment efficiencies were offset by managed shipping traffic acquisition costs related to promoted off-site ads and Authenticity Guarantee program costs. While these programs pressure gross margins as they scale, they provide meaningful strategic benefits to our marketplace by reducing transactional friction, driving sales velocity and enhancing trust. Our non-GAAP operating margin was 26.1% as marketing efficiencies were more than offset by product development expenses and transaction losses. The losses were primarily attributable to our recently launched shipping programs, which significantly improved the seller and buyer experience. Losses with these types of programs are typically higher initially and we expect them to decline over time as we gather data and optimize these programs. Overall, while we continue to reinvest a portion of our top line upside in strategic initiatives, we flowed through more incremental revenue to operating income in Q4 compared to the prior 2 quarters, resulting in 11% year-over-year operating income growth ahead of our guidance. Non-GAAP earnings per share was $1.41, up nearly 13% and GAAP earnings per share from continuing operations was $1.14. Moving on to our balance sheet and capital allocation. We generated free cash flow of $478 million in Q4 and ended the year with cash and fixed income investments of $4.8 billion and gross debt of $6.7 billion on our balance sheet. Our equity investments were valued at over $900 million. We repurchased $625 million of eBay shares in Q4 at an average price of nearly $86, and paid a quarterly cash dividend of $131 million in December or $0.29 per share. Before I discuss our outlook, I'd like to point out 2 accounting policy changes we are making, starting on January 1, 2026. First, we are adopting a new accounting standard for internal use software, and as a result, we will expense all product development costs starting this year, reducing the amount of capitalization. We are providing a recast of the 2024 and 2025 income statements in the appendix of our earnings presentation, which offers a comparable baseline to the financials we'll report starting with Q1. My upcoming comments on Q1 and 2026 growth rates are based on the recast financials. Second, since we first launched our U.K. managed shipping program over a year ago, we have expanded our partnerships with carriers and provided sellers with more choice and control over which shipping services buyers can select. Given the increased flexibility for sellers, we are switching our accounting treatment for this program from gross to net revenue recognition, which will modestly pressure our take rate in 2026. Now I'll share some thoughts on 2026 and starting with our outlook for the first quarter. We expect GMV between $21.5 billion and $21.9 billion for Q1, representing total FX-neutral growth between 10% and 12% year-over-year. Based on current exchange rates, we estimate FX would represent a roughly 450 basis point tailwind to spot GMV growth in Q1. Our guidance assumes continued strength from our strategic priorities, driven by focus categories, C2C and recommerce. Our year-over-year GMV growth is also expected to benefit from continued efficiency in lower funnel marketing and our corner partnership, which each emerged as more noticeable growth drivers in Q2 of last year. In addition, we do expect increased growth contributions from what we perceive as less durable growth drivers, including bullion and collectible coins. We forecast revenue to be between $3 million and $3.05 billion, implying total FX-neutral growth of 13% to 15% year-over-year. Based on current exchange rates, we estimate FX would represent roughly 310 basis points of tailwind to spot revenue growth. Our guidance implies a roughly 3-point delta between FX-neutral revenue and GMV growth year-over-year in Q1. Continued healthy growth in advertising is expected to be a contributor to this delta. A portion of this delta is also related to the lapping of our phased remonetization of U.K. C2C volume last year, but this component will no longer be a tailwind in Q2 as managed shipping revenue faces lapping pressure from the aforementioned accounting change. We expect non-GAAP operating income growth between 11% and 16% year-over-year in Q1, implying non-GAAP operating margin between 28.3% and 29.2%. Our strong operating income growth reflects disciplined reinvestments in strategic priorities and healthy flow-through to the bottom line. We forecast non-GAAP earnings per share between $1.53 and $1.59 in Q1, representing year-over-year growth between 12% and 16%. Our EPS guidance implies the net interest and other line item is roughly neutral in Q1 due to onetime items. Next, I'll share our preliminary views on the full year excluding the potential impact of the pending Depop acquisition, which I will outline separately. For 2026, we are planning our business around the assumption that year-over-year GMV growth is similar to 2025 on an FX-neutral basis, reflecting the continued momentum we're seeing from our established strategic priorities and increased contributions from emerging growth vectors this year. We expect this strong GMV growth despite the incremental impact of tariffs and other lapping considerations we identified last quarter. These impacts are not expected to be linear from quarter-to-quarter influencing year-over-year growth rates in 2026. However, on a 2-year stack basis, our commentary suggests GMV growth is relatively consistent between Q2 and Q4, implying strong underlying growth trends. We are planning for revenue growth to be in line to slightly ahead of GMV for the full year on an FX-neutral basis as healthy growth in advertising revenue is expected to be partially offset by mix shifts in our business, including higher growth contributions from live and vehicles. We believe these emerging growth vectors will contribute long-term top and bottom line growth and improve the health of our marketplace. We expect non-GAAP operating income growth between 8% and 10% year-over-year in 2026, as we balance reinvestments in our strategic priorities and emerging growth vectors with strong flow-through to the bottom line. Importantly, we will continue to be disciplined in our investments and drive operational efficiencies in our business whenever possible. We expect non-GAAP earnings growth to be relatively in line with non-GAAP operating income in 2026, due to below-the-line items that are expected to roughly offset the EPS accretion from our share repurchases. We anticipate our lower cash balance and higher interest expense would pressure the net interest and other line item year-over-year after Q1. Additionally, as we alluded to last quarter, we are increasing our non-GAAP tax rate assumption in 2026 to 17.5% to reflect the impact of global tax policies and our geographical business mix. Next, let me share a few thoughts on capital allocation. We forecast capital expenditures to be between 4% and 5% of revenue for the full year. As we outlined last quarter, we plan to target repurchases and cash dividends totaling between 90% to 100% of free cash flow in a normal year. For 2026, we are targeting roughly $2 billion of share repurchases, which is squarely within that range despite our planned acquisition of Depop, underscoring our ability to balance inorganic investments with strong capital returns to shareholders. In February, our Board authorized an incremental $2 billion under our stock repurchase plan in addition to our remaining authorization of roughly $800 million at the end of 2025. Our Board also declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.31 per share for the first quarter to be paid in March, which is an increase of $0.02 from the quarterly dividends paid out in 2025. Now I would like to take a few minutes to walk through the financial implications of our pending acquisition of Depop. We have entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Depop from Etsy for approximately $1.2 billion in cash subject to certain purchase price adjustments. We currently expect this acquisition to close in Q2 of 2026, subject to the satisfaction of customary closing conditions and regulatory approvals. As Jamie noted, Depop is a great strategic fit and builds upon the significant organic momentum in our business, driven by years of investment in C2C and growing value proposition in fashion. Overall, Fashion is one of our largest categories, generating more than $10 billion in GMV for eBay annually. And in 2025, our U.S. market alone added over $500 million of incremental fashion GMV year-over-year, the majority of which came from C2C sellers. Our acquisition of Depop would add a business generating approximately $1 billion of annual gross merchandise sales, primarily in the U.S. market, where it grew by nearly 60% year-over-year in 2025. Upon completion of this transaction, we expect Depop would contribute 1 to 2 percentage points to total FX-neutral GMV growth year-over-year in 2026, assuming the deal closes as expected in Q2. Given the immense potential we see for this marketplace within eBay's portfolio, we plan to invest in Depop to support future growth and synergies between our respective marketplaces. Our current assumption is that the acquisition would represent a low single-digit headwind to the 8% to 10% operating income growth we forecast for the core eBay marketplace. This estimate reflects not only the current operating profile of Depop, but also integration costs and planned investments. We would also expect the acquisition to dilute our non-GAAP earnings per share growth by low single digits, with the EPS impact modestly higher than operating income dilution due to foregone interest income from the cash used for this transaction. Over the long term, we are highly confident this acquisition will be meaningfully accretive to operating income and EPS growth and drive significant value for shareholders. On a consolidated basis, including synergies, we expect the acquisition of Depop to become accretive to non-GAAP operating income in 2028. In closing, our Q4 results capped off a tremendous year for eBay. In 2025, we accelerated GMV growth to nearly 6%, increased non-GAAP operating income by roughly 7% year-over-year and grew non-GAAP earnings per share by nearly 13% year-over-year, marking our second consecutive year of double-digit earnings growth. We demonstrated our ability to accelerate growth invest in our strategic priorities and transform the eBay experience through AI, all while delivering strong bottom line results and healthy capital returns to shareholders. Despite a full year of impact from trade policy changes and the lapping considerations we've laid out, our outlook for 2026 implies another strong year of balanced top and bottom line growth with our investments supporting an exciting innovation road map for our customers. With that, Jamie and I will now take your questions.