Thank you, Dominic. Let me start with deposits on slide five. Over the past five years, East West growth has been deposit-led. This has allowed us to fund loans, while maintaining strong balance sheet liquidity. In 2024, East West grew end-of-period deposits by 13% to a record $63.2 billion. In early 2024, we also repaid $4.5 billion of BTFP borrowings, driven by our confidence in our ability to grow core deposits. During the fourth quarter, we saw a notable uptick in DDA and money market balances with continued overall stability in savings in time deposits. Our deposit mix has stabilized with DDA levels in the mid-20s. Our period-end total deposit cost declined a further 25 basis points in the fourth quarter to 2.59%. Looking into Q1, our 2025 Lunar New Year CD special was launched last week, offering a six-month CD at 4.18% and a nine-month CD at 4.08%. We believe these are competitive for our regional markets and we expect good retention and potentially good traction on new money inflows at these price points. Notably, these levels are 107 and 117 basis points below last year's CD offering at 5.25%. Turning to loans on slide six. East West grew total average loans by 6% for the year and end-of-period loans by 3%, in line with our prior guidance. C&I growth in the fourth quarter was driven by new credits as utilization was relatively stable quarter-over-quarter. Although we have yet to see evidence of increased demand in Q1, we expect C&I growth to pick up later in 2025 given the improving overall business sentiment. Residential mortgage had a good quarter in Q4, partly reflecting the drop-in rates we saw in the third quarter. Despite the recent backup rates, pipelines remain full going into the first quarter. We expect residential mortgage growth to continue at its current pace. Overall, we expect 2025 loan growth to be in the range of 4% to 6%, driven by strong growth in C&I production and continued residential mortgage strength, leading to a further diversified and more balanced loan portfolio over time. Shifting to net interest income and net interest margin on slide seven, as we guided, NII rebounded in the back half of the year, driven primarily by lower total deposit costs. Our net interest margin was stable at 3.24%, while our interest-rate spread widened 9 basis points quarter-over-quarter. At the end of the fourth quarter, our end-of-period interest-bearing deposit costs have come down 49 basis points from the second quarter, consistent with our expected 50% deposit beta. In the fourth quarter, our total hedges cost us $18 million of net interest income or 10 basis points to NIM. In January, $0.5 billion of negative carry swaps rolled off and a further $0.5 billion is set to roll off in February. These two maturities will alleviate approximately half of our negative hedge impact. The benefit of these hedges rolling off, our expected balance sheet growth, and our improving deposit costs and mix should combine to support net interest income and margin levels from here. Our outlook for net interest income assumes 225 basis points cuts during 2025, resulting in a gradually steeping in yield curve as the implied year-end curve suggested. Moving on to fee income, fee income grew by 11% over the last four years and grew by 12% in 2024. As Dominic mentioned, we achieved record fee income in 2024. Our strength over the past year was driven by sales execution in wealth management and foreign exchange, and strong traction in treasury management sales, particularly around commercial payments activity. East West has been consistently growing wealth management, foreign exchange and deposit account fees at over 20% per year, and we remain focused on driving this growth as we look into 2025. Taking NII and fee income together, we expect total revenue growth in 2025 and the order of 5% to 7%. Turning now to expenses on slide nine, East West continued to deliver industry-leading efficiency. Fourth quarter efficiency ratio was 36.9%. Excluding FDIC special deposit insurance assessment charges, total operating non-interest expenses have grown on an average at an 8% clip over the past five years, including in 2024. This is in line with our expectations for 2025. Expense growth is expected to be driven primarily by investments in our people and tech to support our growth strategies. Now, I'll hand the call over to Irene for some comments on credits and capital.