Great. Thank you, Mike, and thanks, everyone, for joining our call today. Before I walk through the Q1 results, I want to take a moment to discuss an important update to our financial reporting framework that reflects the ongoing evolution of Galaxy's business. Beginning this quarter, we are transitioning from reporting financial results across our previous 3 operating business segments, Global Markets, Asset Management and Digital Infrastructure to a new consolidated structure with 2 operating business segments, Digital Assets and Data Centers and one corporate segment called Treasury and Corporate. This resegmentation reflects both how we operate internally today and how we believe investors can best evaluate the strategic and financial performance of our business going forward. Our Digital Asset segment brings together all of Galaxy's franchise crypto-related operations under one umbrella. This segment now aligns our Global Markets businesses, which include our trading and investment banking activities, along with our asset management and infrastructure solutions businesses, including investment management and blockchain infrastructure offerings such as staking, tokenization and custodial technology. These businesses increasingly operate in lockstep from how we engage with clients to how we deploy technology to how we manage our risk. We believe this reporting structure will provide the investment community with a more cohesive view into the breadth and performance of our client-facing digital asset business. Second, we have introduced a dedicated Data Center segment to reflect the growth and strategic importance of our plan to transform Helios into a world-class data center. While we do not expect to generate revenue from this segment until sometime in early 2026, Galaxy is already making investments and incurring certain expenses as we retrofit the existing facility and as we prepare for further expansion of the site. We are currently capitalizing these expenses, including staffing, equipment and certain financing costs as they directly contribute to preparing the facilities for operational readiness. These investments are capitalized costs will be depreciated over the asset's useful life once we begin delivering critical IT load and recognizing revenue early in 2026. Although we expect de minimis operating income from the Data Center segment this year, breaking it out now provides clearer visibility into how current investments are laying the foundation for future revenue and how we are allocating capital to drive long-term value across our operating businesses. In addition to the 2 operating segments, we've established a new Treasury and Corporate segment, which captures the economic impacts from our balance sheet investments, along with other financial results not directly tied to our operating businesses, such as nonclient-facing activities and certain legal costs. Due to the retirement of our mining activity at our Helios campus in Q1, which consisted of over 90% of our total mining capacity, this segment will also include our remaining Bitcoin mining operations in East Texas, which is much smaller and is now entirely proprietary in nature. Introducing this new breakout is intended to enhance transparency and provide a clearer distinction between our balance sheet activities and the performance of our core operating businesses. This new reporting framework is taking effect this quarter, and we will make recast historical results in this construct available for comparison purposes. In addition, we have also moved to reporting U.S. GAAP financials beginning this quarter, reflecting our domestication as a Delaware Incorporated company, which will streamline both our internal and external reporting processes going forward. We will no longer be reporting IFRS financials, but again, we will make U.S. GAAP quarterly results available for historical comparison purposes. One thing to note on our reported results. Under U.S. GAAP, the notional value of purchases and sales of certain digital assets with clients and exchanges are required to be reported as revenue and transaction expenses on a grossed up basis. As you'll see on Page 2 of our earnings release, this gross-up results in a very large value for GAAP revenue and transaction expenses. Due to this accounting treatment, we believe that adjusted gross profit, a non-GAAP measure, provides a more meaningful reflection of our revenue and financial performance, and accordingly, we will reference this metric as a primary measure for digital assets on today's call and going forward. With that, let me turn to the highlights for the quarter. As Mike mentioned, in Q1, we saw meaningful pressure across crypto markets with Bitcoin down 12% for the quarter and Ether and Solana down between 30% and 50%. Against this backdrop, we reported a net loss of $295 million for the first quarter, driven primarily by the reduced value of our balance sheet digital asset holdings. Our operating expenses, excluding gross-up transaction costs, were $188 million for the quarter, and this was down approximately $143 million quarter-over-quarter, driven by a reduction in the G&A from the absence of a legal settlement in Q4 and partially offset by a onetime $57 million impairment charge tied to the wind down of mining operations at Helios. Excluding onetime items, total operating expenses were roughly $130 million in the first quarter. Our equity capital remained strong at $1.9 billion as of March 31, including $1.1 billion in cash and net stablecoins. We ended the quarter with roughly $740 million of noncurrent investments on our balance sheet, consisting primarily of fund, private equity and venture investments, which are marked at fair value as of March 31. In Q1, we proactively managed our risk exposure by reducing a portion of our digital asset holdings while increasing our cash and net stablecoin position. As we embark on a multiyear, multibillion-dollar data center build, maintaining a disciplined approach to capital and liquidity management is paramount. We remain focused on managing our balance sheet in a way that supports the capital-intensive demands of the data center expansion while also ensuring we're well positioned to meet the evolving opportunities across our digital asset businesses. Our risk management framework and deliberate approach to capital deployment enable us to invest with high conviction when we see opportunities and just as importantly, reduce risk when and where appropriate. This approach provides us the capacity to support growth across our businesses while offering clients, counterparts and investors the confidence to partner with Galaxy as we continue to grow. Now turning to our operating business results, starting with digital assets. Our Digital Asset segment generated approximately $65 million in adjusted gross profit and $3.5 million in operating income in the first quarter. As previewed on our Q4 earnings call, our trading business experienced strong client demand in January but faded into February, leading to a slowdown in activity and a softening of trading revenue, particularly in the latter half of the quarter. On a positive note, our lending business continued to be a point of stability with healthy activity throughout the quarter. We grew our average loan book modestly from Q4 to roughly $870 million in Q1 and delivered net interest revenue of roughly $23 million, up 25% quarter-over-quarter. We continue to maintain a disciplined approach to underwriting in our lending business, which has been well received by both new and existing counterparties. On the investment banking side, we were proud to serve as a co-manager on the CoreWeave IPO in Q1, and our team continues to deepen relationships across the ecosystem as the broader market environment gains momentum. Bigger picture, we are seeing increasing interest from traditional financial institutions, particularly those seeking regulated structured access to cryptocurrency markets. In response, we have taken a deliberate approach to securing key licenses, notably our registration as a U.S. swap dealer and more recently, our U.K. registration under the approval of the U.K. FCA. This new FCA license enables our London-based teams to execute transactions on behalf of clients, further expanding our global reach and institutional capabilities. These formal regulatory registrations reflect our commitment to operating with the highest standards of compliance and governance, positioning Galaxy as a trusted counterparty to institutions globally. Now turning to our Asset Management and Infrastructure Solutions business. We ended the first quarter with approximately $7 billion in combined assets under management and assets under stake, a 29% decline quarter-over-quarter, reflecting the pullback in crypto prices. Despite this, in Q1, our Asset Management and Infrastructure Solutions segment delivered $22 million in adjusted gross profit, which you can think of as essentially fee-based revenue, down just 8% from the prior quarter. In general, we continue to see healthy demand for our asset management products, and I'm pleased to share that we achieved a key milestone in our venture franchise, raising over $160 million in commitments to the Galaxy Crypto Venture Fund, exceeding our initial target. We continue to see healthy momentum in fundraising, reflecting growing institutional confidence in our long-term approach to venture investing in the digital asset ecosystem. On the distribution front, one of the largest U.S. wealth platforms with over $2 trillion in client assets recently began offering BTCO, our U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF this quarter. This further expands Galaxy's products across traditional wealth channels and reinforces the continued integration of digital assets into mainstream investment portfolios. Subsequent to quarter end, we launched a Solana ETF in partnership with CI in Canada, the first of its kind to incorporate staking into its structure. This ETF will leverage Galaxy Solana validator nodes as one of its staking providers and is a notable product innovation, which aligns our broader commitment to delivering differentiated institutional-grade access to crypto markets. Our staking business continues to integrate with additional platforms, including