Thank you, Kate. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. The fourth quarter rounded out what was a very strong year for our company, marked by consistent execution and profitable organic growth across our enterprise. We delivered net income available to common shareholders of $19.6 million or $0.96 per diluted share for the fourth quarter and $73.4 million or $3.61 per diluted share for the full year. Return on average assets was 120 basis points for the year, while return on average equity was 12.38%. Both measures exceeded our annual guides, supported by growing net interest income of $200 million and durable noninterest income of $45 million. Our efficiency ratio for the year was 58%. We are incredibly proud of these results and excited about the coming year and opportunities ahead. Veggie. Our disciplined approach to long-term value creation. In the fourth quarter, capital actions included the repurchase of 1.7% of outstanding shares, totaling nearly $11 million, and the successful completion of an $80 million sub-debt offering. Sub-debt notes have a five-year fixed rate of 6.5%, which is favorable to the 2015 and 2020 issuances that were subsequently redeemed earlier this month. 2025 notes received a BBB minus rating from Kroll, with a stable outlook reflective of our improved profitability and capital position. The strength of the company's credit rating and favorable coupon on our recent debt issuance are clear testaments to our commitment to achieving higher financial performance. We delivered solid loan growth, with total loans increasing 1.5% in the fourth quarter and 4% year over year to $4.66 billion. This growth was reflective of strong competitive positioning and demand in commercial lending across our Upstate New York markets. Commercial business loans were down modestly on a linked quarter basis and up 11% year over year. Commercial mortgage loans were up about 4% from the end of the linked quarter and 6.5% year over year, led by healthy activity in our Rochester region. We remain highly confident in the durability and growth potential of our Upstate New York markets. This includes Syracuse, where Micron Technology's long-anticipated $100 billion investment officially broke ground earlier this month. We build out an operation of an entire semiconductor supply chain is expected to bring thousands of jobs and drive significant economic expansion. While the results will take years to fully materialize, we were excited to see the shovel in the ground and anticipate more meaningful lending activity beginning this year as infrastructure, housing, and health care expand to support a larger anticipated population. Residential lending grew modestly, up 1% during both the three and twelve months ended 12/31/2025. Originations were led by Buffalo and Rochester, where the housing market remains tight and prices have continued to increase. That said, inventories are starting to loosen in our overall geography. Application volumes were up year over year. We are beginning to see increased refinance activity. New 2025 continue to build their clientele and pipelines, supporting our expectations for stronger residential production in 2026. Consumer indirect loans were down 3.7% during the fourth quarter and 4.5% for the year, to $807 million. We manage this portfolio based on business unit profitability targets, and have been comfortable allowing runoff to outpace originations, given current market conditions. As we maintain a strong focus on profitable spreads and favorable credit mix, we expect consumer indirect loans to drift down modestly in 2026. As a reminder, we are applying indirect lender for individual vehicle purchases through a network of more than 350 new auto dealers across New York State. The portfolio has an average loan size of approximately $20,000 and a weighted average FICO score exceeding 700. Period-end total deposits were $5.21 billion, down 2.8% from September 30, driven by seasonal public deposit outflows and lower broker deposits. Deposits were up 2% year over year despite the ongoing wind down of our banking as a service line of business. As a reminder, we announced plans to exit BaaS in September 2024 and since then, have worked closely with our fintech partners to onboard their customers in $100 million of associated deposit balances. We had approximately $7 million of these deposits on the balance sheet at year-end, and continue to expect they will roll off in the first quarter to a new banking provider. While we did leverage broker deposits throughout the year as planned, to help offset the outflow of the BAS deposits, strong growth in our reciprocal deposit business allowed us to reduce broker in the fourth quarter. Our reciprocal deposit base is a differentiator, one anchored in deep and often long-tenured commercial and municipal relationships. More than 20% of these customers and 30% of the balances have had a relationship with Five Star Bank for more than a decade. The average relationship tenure across the portfolio is five years. Through the reciprocal product offering, we were able to meet the deposit needs of individual, municipal, and commercial customers requiring collateralization above the $250,000 FDIC insurance limit for full insurance coverage. This allows us to keep important customer relationships in-house. Additional details on our performance, and a look at our 2026 guidance. Thank you, and good morning, everyone. As Marty shared, we are very proud of our 2025 results, and we are committed to pushing higher in 2026 as we continue to unlock more potential from our commercial banking, consumer banking, and wealth management offerings. Our full-year 2025 return on assets exceeded initial expectations, reflecting the sustained momentum and our ability to raise the bar on operating results. We anticipate higher performance for the full year 2026 with a targeted return on average assets of at least 122 basis points, return on average equity exceeding 11.9%, and an efficiency ratio of below 58%. We also expect margin expansion in '26 as we continue to shift our earning asset mix and actively manage funding costs. NIM is expected to incrementally build through the year, supporting a full-year target in the mid-three sixties. As a reminder, this is based on a spot rate forecast as of year-end, which does not factor in potential future rate cuts. Looking at our 2025 results, margin was 3.62% for the fourth quarter, and 3.53% for the full year. As expected, quarterly NIM was down three basis points from the linked period, in part to FOMC activity, given the timing of deposit and variable rate loan repricing. However, the primary driver of the compression was the impact of December sub-debt offering coupled with the mid-January call of our preexisting sub-debt issuances contributed about two basis points of declines. Average loan yields decreased nine basis points as compared to the third quarter, primarily reflecting the timing of the October rate cut. As a reminder, approximately 40% of our loan portfolio is tied to variable rates, with a repricing frequency of one month or less. Cost of funds decreased four basis points from the linked quarter. Higher rate CDs matured alongside overall downward deposit repricing. Year over year, our quarterly margin expanded by 71 basis points, reflecting the transformative securities restructuring we completed in 2024. In addition to high-quality loan growth, supporting an improved earning asset mix, and effective management of funding costs. For 2026, we are targeting annual loan growth of about 5%, driven by commercial. Given the number of loans that closed in the fourth quarter, coupled with larger anticipated payoffs and paydowns that we have seen in recent years, we expect commercial growth to be lighter in Q1 and build through the year. Deposits remain a top priority for us, amid a highly competitive landscape. We are guiding to a low single-digit deposit growth year over year, and remain focused on growing lower-cost core deposits, including demand, now, and savings across both our consumer and commercial lines of business. Turning to fee revenues, Noninterest income was $11.9 million for the quarter, $45 million for the year, supported in part by several unique factors. This included higher than typical company-owned life insurance, for quality income in 2025. The year prior, noninterest income reflected the $100 million net loss associated with the investment securities restructuring, and the $13.7 million gain on our insurance subsidiary sale. COLI revenue was $2.8 million in the fourth quarter, a 2.1% decrease from the linked period, and $11.4 million for the year, compared to $5.5 million in 2024. The year-over-year increase was due in part to higher revenue in 2025 following the surrender and redeploy strategy we executed last January, the carrier's late June redemption of the surrender policy proceeds. We originally expected third and fourth quarter income to each be approximately $275,000 less than the level reported in the second quarter. However, results exceeded expectations given the performance of the underlying policies. Accordingly, we expect COLI income to normalize in 2026, to approximately $10.5 million on a full-year basis. Full-year investment advisory income of $11.7 million was an increase of $1 million or over 9% from 2024. Career Capital experienced positive net flows. As new business and market-driven gains offset outflows, pushing AUM to $3.6 billion at year-end, up $500.4 million or 16% from one year prior. Career Capital is one of the largest RIAs in our region, providing customized investment management, retirement planning, and consulting services, for mass affluent and high-net-worth individuals and families, businesses, institutions, and foundations. We look forward to continuing to nurture its growth and are targeting a low to mid-single-digit increase in investment advisory income in 2020, which is partly dependent on market conditions. Commercial back-to-back swap activity was again strong in the quarter, with associated fee income of $1.1 million, up $263,000 more than 31% from the third quarter. Full-year 2025 swap fee income of $2.5 million was up $1.8 million from the prior year. We expect swap fees to moderate to a range between $1 million and $2 million, which is more in line with the 2022 and 2023 levels experienced. We reported quarterly noninterest expense of $36.7 million compared to $35.9 million in the third quarter, reflecting accruals for performance-related incentive compensation in 2025. Owner expense was $142 million compared to $178.9 million in 2024, where results were impacted by the previously disclosed fraud event and auto lending settlements. The year-over-year increase in salaries and benefits expense was driven in part by higher claims activity in our self-funded medical plan. We have discussed throughout much of 2025. We expect the higher claims trend to continue into 2026, and a higher run rate is reflected in our 2026 expense guidance. Higher occupancy and equipment expense also contributed to the variance and primarily reflects the ATM conversion and upgrade project that we completed in 2025. Prudent expense management remains a top priority, reflecting our commitment to maintaining the positive operating leverage we have achieved. We are targeting low single-digit noninterest expense growth in 2026, primarily driven by a mid-single-digit increase in salaries and benefits reflecting the full impact of investments made in talent during the year and annual merit-based increases. The 2026 effective tax rate is expected to be between 16.5% to 17.5%, including the impact of the amortization of tax credit investments placed in service in recent. This was down from the 18% we reported in 2025, primarily due to the taxable COLI surrender and redeploy transaction executed during the year. We were budgeting full-year net charge-offs of 25 to 35 basis points of average loans. While our experience in recent years has been lower than this, including the 24 basis points we reported in 2025, we are being conservative with our outlook at this time. As a reminder, we finished 2025 with an ACL total loans ratio of 102 basis points, a coverage ratio that is aligned with our credit risk framework. That concludes my guidance for 2026. And I will turn the call back to Marty. Thanks, Jack. We are proud of the progress our team has made and confident in our ability to execute on our strategic plan. As we look ahead, we are focused on organic credit discipline growth, centered on deep relationships. Prudent management of expenses, balancing people and technology investments with a firm commitment to positive operating leverage. And continuing to build a strong capital position that supports our efforts to deliver meaningful long-term value to shareholders. As a small-cap financial holding company primarily serving Upstate New York, we believe our size, scale, and market position create distinctive advantages. Both competitively as an investment opportunity. Having simplified our business and strengthened our balance sheet over the last twenty-four months, we are intently focused on driving sustainable growth through our community bank and wealth management firm. With more than $6 billion in assets on our balance sheet and another $3.6 billion under advisement, our size and scale are differentiators. Our deep roots and long history going back more than two hundred years in some of our legacy markets are complemented by exciting growth opportunities in the metros of Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse. And supplemented by the high returns of our Mid Atlantic team. We look forward to delivering organic growth in support profitability and high-quality earnings. That we believe support a higher multiple. I would like to thank you for your attention this morning. That concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, please open the call for questions. Thank you.