Thank you, Neal, and thank you, everyone, for joining us. We delivered strong profitability in the third quarter despite the impacts of tariffs, with earnings exceeding the high end of our guidance range. This was driven by the strength of our go-forward portfolio, particularly our owned brands, as well as a healthy mix of full-price sales and our mitigation efforts against tariffs. Our solid year-to-date performance highlights G-III's ability to effectively manage through a dynamic and often challenging marketplace. Since PVH's unexpected decision to end our long-standing licensing partnership, we've demonstrated significant progress in transforming our business model and accelerating our longer-term strategies. At its peak, the Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger brands represented over $1.5 billion in annual net wholesale sales. And this year, these brands are expected to generate approximately $800 million. As previously mentioned, the PVH sales decline accelerated quicker than originally anticipated. Despite this decline, our teams replaced more than 70% of the lost sales volume through organic growth of our go-forward owned and licensed portfolio. Our newer brands, like Donna Karan, have enabled us to command greater pricing power while maintaining healthy price elasticity. Our balance sheet during this period has strengthened, ending the quarter with a net cash position of $174 million. We remain keenly focused on executing our strategic priorities, making disciplined brand investments and positioning our portfolio to capture market share and long-term growth. Our third quarter performance reflects healthy consumer demand for our brands. Seasonal weather boosted our cold weather categories, which saw a nice pickup in sell-throughs across brands and channels as we move through the quarter. Within wholesale, we saw meaningful gains in women's outerwear with full price retail sales up nearly 20%. Our marketing investments have driven a significant increase in consumer engagement as seen in the uptick in traffic across our direct-to-consumer business. In digital, we saw traffic lift over 20% across our owned dot-com, which drove substantial growth in conversion rates and overall sales. As we exited October, trends continued to improve through the Black Friday period, with Europe posting high single-digit growth and North America up double digits compared to last year. Performance across channels indicates that our product offerings continue to align with consumer preferences. Demand has been steady across brands during the holiday season, supported by full price sell-throughs. Looking ahead, we remain mindful of the global consumer environment and are taking a prudent approach to our outlook for the remainder of the year. Now let us review our third quarter fiscal 2026 financial results. Net sales for the quarter were $989 million, generally in line with the expectations. Non-GAAP earnings per diluted share were $1.90, $0.37 above the midpoint of our guidance range. Gross margins were 38.6%, outperforming expectations, driven by a healthy mix of our higher-margin owned brands and solid selling into the full price channel. Units were down year-to-year as our disciplined inventory management kept inventories nearly flat, up just 3% despite tariffs. We remain in the strong financial position, ending the quarter in a net cash position of $174 million after repurchasing approximately $50 million in stock year-to-date. As we work to maximize the full potential of our globally recognized brands, we're guided by our strategic priorities. Our growth is powered by an exceptional foundation of experienced leadership, world-class merchant capabilities, a diverse product mix, a reliable supply chain and long-standing retail relationships. Together, these strengths enable us to bring brands to market and scale them across channels with speed. Our strategy centers on driving both near- and long-term growth. Building brand strength remains a core focus, and our strong seasonal marketing and promotional cadence continue to deliver results. We're also prioritizing investments in technology, infrastructure and talent to enhance our business and improve efficiency. As we look to the final months of the fiscal year, we remain focused on holiday performance and spring selling. We continue to plan our key brands to grow mid-single digits this year. Capturing the long-term potential of our own brands is a top strategic priority. These brands are powerful, sustainable drivers of profitability, delivering higher margin and incremental licensing income. We're focused on 4 key pillars. First, product and consumer engagement. We're leveraging each brand's unique DNA to deliver differentiated products across every shopping channel. By extending our core assortments and entering new categories, we're delivering growth in the wholesale channel, particularly in North America. We will continue to build momentum through impactful marketing campaigns, strategic partnerships and innovative collaborations, ensuring that each of our brands remains firmly at the center of its own culture. Second, driving direct-to-consumer. Complementing our strong wholesale business, we're enhancing our digital capabilities to boost traffic and conversion on our brand sites and many marketplaces. Meanwhile, we continue to evolve our North American retail segment strategy to deliver profitability and continue to optimize our international retail performance. Third, international expansion. Our owned brands remain highly underpenetrated internationally. Strategic investments and partnerships, including AWWG, position us to capture the substantial long-term growth opportunity. Fourth, category expansion through licensing. Our partners have helped us extend into additional categories like fragrance, eyewear and home as well as experiential categories such as hospitality, all deepening consumer connections and broadening brand reach. We believe we have many opportunities to monetize as we grow each brand. To support our key pillars, we continue to invest in marketing to amplify the global visibility of our brands. We see tremendous potential across all growth avenues, including product, channel, category and geographies. Now I'll share some brand highlights from the third quarter. Donna Karan outperformed expectations, delivering impressive double-digit sales increases in North America. We expect growth of 40% in fiscal 2026, reinforcing the brand's position as a key growth driver within our portfolio. The brand is leveraging its iconic DNA and aspirational luxury positioning to capture strong consumer demand at higher price points, underscoring its enduring appeal and pricing power. As we continue to develop the brand into a full lifestyle offering, we're excited about the introduction of Donna Karan Weekend, which hit stores in early November. The collection offers a more casual yet refined aesthetic, and we're already seeing great results across channels. Dresses, denim and knit sets are early standouts so far in the fourth quarter. Donna Karan Jewelry launched in mid-November, exclusively on donnakaran.com, and will roll out to department and specialty stores in spring 2026. The collection already gained buzz with its signature twisted cuff earning the Accessories Council's 2025 award for design excellence, and we've seen strong sell-throughs through the first few weeks. In the quarter, donnakaran.com outperformed, with traffic up approximately 150% and average order values increasing over 10%, alongside healthy AURs and strong sell-throughs. Now 1.5 years since launch, we're seeing close to 20% of our sales from repeat customers. This growth was led by dresses, footwear and handbags, with particular strength in our best-selling Baldwin handbag. Wholesale momentum during the quarter was equally impressive. The brand is currently sold in about 1,700 points of sale, and we expect to add roughly 200 more by spring 2026. We're increasing penetration across better department stores with retailers allocating a greater footprint to the brand in new and existing stores. Premium retailers like Saks, Bloomingdale's and Nordstroms have expanded distribution, both online and in-store this fall, reflecting the brand's ability to enter new accounts while maintaining its aspirational brand positioning. On the marketing front, we launched our Fall 2025 Campaign, Woman to Woman, in early September, featuring a new cast of talent with deep connections to the brand. The campaign resonated strongly, generating approximately 5.6 billion impressions and over $11 million in earned media value. We carried that momentum into the holiday season with refreshed campaigns, strategic paid media and VIP partnerships aimed at attracting new audiences to shop. Building on the brand's outstanding domestic success, we've been disciplined in our distribution rollout and see significant opportunities to expand across categories and channels, ultimately capturing the long-term global potential. Karl Lagerfeld delivered another strong quarter, amplified by the success of our global brand initiative starring the iconic Paris Hilton. Our fall/winter 2025 campaign, From Paris with Love, delivered a high-impact global rollout across our key markets, marking one of our strongest media performances to date. This culminated in the standout cultural moment during Paris Fashion Week. An exclusive late-night event at the Palais de Tokyo, where Paris Hilton took over the DJ booth in a series of custom Karl Lagerfeld looks. The event drew an extraordinary gathering of fashion leaders, celebrities and global influencers. The campaign was supported by a series of high-impact in-store activations across the globe, driving local visibility and reinforcing the campaign's momentum at retail. Building on this, we rolled out our holiday campaign, From Karl with Love, with activations designed to emphasize storytelling, retail experiences and wider influencer amplifications. From a brand perspective, we continue to see strong growth in our women's business in North America outperforming. Our global men's business continues to be a key growth catalyst, complementing our women's business and posting close to 20% growth in the quarter. Karl Lagerfeld jeans, currently sold internationally, is resonating with younger consumers and driving incremental growth, with sales up over 30% in the third quarter. The Studio Collection continues to reinforce its role as the brand's halo with its fashion-forward design, driving strong press and consumer interest across the campaign and gaining presence in key European retailers. Specifically, in North America, we saw a healthy performance across wholesale and retail, with strong full price selling and AUR increases. With just over 3,200 domestic points of sale in Fall 2025, we expect to add approximately 100 more by Spring, driven by extended assortments and increased footprint. Our North American direct-to-consumer business saw a positive comp sales increases, showing that our refreshed product is resonating across men's and women's. Internationally, despite a soft macro environment, the brand continued to perform well, supported by disciplined pricing, which drove strong gross margin improvement amid a more promotionally competitive landscape. Our customer activations led directly to improved traffic and performance. As cooler weather hit, we saw digital traffic accelerate across our own dot-com as well as digital partners, including marketplace. Looking ahead to spring, our collaboration with Paris will continue for a second season, driving high global visibility across key markets. In our hospitality business, we're looking forward to sharing some news shortly on a new project. With strong global recognition and momentum behind our expansion initiatives, the brand is well positioned to gain share across North America and Europe, while capturing significant untapped opportunity in Asia, setting the stage for sustained long-term growth. DKNY, our largest brand, was led by healthy full-price sell-throughs in North America across key categories, reinforcing brand relevance. Our North American direct-to-consumer business also showed solid improvement, with positive comp growth across stores and dkny.com, up 20% on higher conversion. Internationally, we continued to see solid traction. Fall 2025 deliveries and improving sell-throughs helped meet targets despite softer European markets. Europe showed notable progress led by handbags, our top-performing category, with strong full price sell-throughs. Digital performance at DKNY similar to Karl remains robust, driven by growth at Answear and