Thank you, Alexis, and good morning, and thank you all for joining us today. At Investor Day in September, we laid out the 4 priorities underpinning our Hain Reimagined strategy: one, to focus and simplify our portfolio and footprint; two, to deliver cost savings via fuel to expand margins and invest in our business; three, to build the capabilities needed to drive scale; and four, to grow in our core categories and brands. Today, you'll hear about the progress we've made on the focus and fuel pillars of our strategy, which have been our first priorities in this foundational year, unlocking efficiencies in our P&L. Under the build pillar, you'll hear how we are investing in capabilities to accelerate our return to growth. And under the grow pillar, you'll hear more detail about how each of our categories are performing. You'll also hear that our starting point in some areas was less developed than we initially anticipated, requiring a heavier lift and causing the pivot to growth to take longer than expected. While we are disappointed in top line results in the quarter, we are pleased to deliver continued margin expansion and momentum in adjusted EBITDA delivery, free cash flow and net debt reduction. The proof points that I'm sharing today reinforce our confidence in our ability to achieve the financial algorithm outlined with Hain Reimagined in September. Under the focus pillar, we said we would focus on 3 initiatives to simplify our business. Creating a winning portfolio, consolidating our footprint and integrating our global operating model. First, as we shared last week, we have removed underperforming SKUs representing 6% of items in our global portfolio. This includes the previously announced sale of the Fenster brand in Snacks, the streamlining of our plant-based meat-free portfolio in Meal Prep and additional refinements in Baby and Kids and beverages as part of ongoing brand maintenance. The largest portfolio reduction is in personal care, where we are removing underperforming SKUs, representing 62% of items or 30% of net sales in the category, enabling us to focus on driving stronger velocities within the core assortment, reducing unnecessary complexity and delivering margin expansion. Second, we have streamlined our operating footprint to leverage synergies across the business and drive scale as we focus on our five core geographies. We announced the consolidation of our personal care manufacturing footprint, reducing our number of Hain facilities from two to one and eliminating 60% of our co-manufacturers from the personal care network. We also announced that we ceased all production and operations within our nonstrategic joint venture in India and will be servicing the EMEA market via distribution model. These focused initiatives will drive increased capacity utilization and lower costs. And third, we have made tremendous progress on our global operating model, transforming the company into a truly integrated enterprise. Historically, Hain has operated as a collection of siloed entities without a common operating model, systems or processes and without leveraging global capabilities. Over the course of the year, we have created the foundational building blocks that will result in a more proactive and resilient growth-driven company. We have established functional centers of excellence across end-to-end supply chain, procurement, R&D, quality, IT, HR and finance to both drive synergies and leverage scale, and we are beginning to see results. Our work in end-to-end supply chain effectiveness has resulted in improved reliability and service levels. For the third quarter, Hain in-stock rates were over 94%, increasing 130 basis points from quarter 2 and 400 basis points better than our peer set. This is a significant improvement and positions us better to partner with our customers, expand distribution and ensure reliable supply to invest in promotional and customer support. Moving on to our fuel pillar, where we have made significant progress in unlocking cost savings through revenue growth management, working capital management and [Technical Difficulty] driving better net price utilization and promotional effectiveness. We are beginning to see this progress show end market in the U.S. with our promotional list improving in quarter three over the prior quarter in salty snacks and Meal Prep, in particular yogurt, soup and nut butters. On working capital management, we have leveraged new digital technology and improved processes to reduce inventory level by nearly 10% year-to-date and extend days payable outstanding by 9 days. And we are driving end-to-end operational efficiency to sourcing and productivity initiative, putting us on track to deliver $61 million in productivity for the year. These efforts have enabled us to expand margins and deliver strong cash flow while both offsetting inflation and investing in capabilities to enable our pivot to growth. When we announced our transformation strategy, we highlighted our 5 focus categories where our leading brands have an opportunity to drive greater awareness, reach, penetration and share. And we said we would drive more effective mix of working versus nonworking investment to get better before we increased our marketing spending. For the third quarter, we increased our marketing slightly as a percent of revenue with a priority focus on snacks, beverage and baby with continued support for this category, in particular, to support sustained category leadership in the U.K. Our brand building investments in the Celestial Seasonings brand are driving household penetration, share growth and velocity gains in our top retail and e-commerce partners, and we are seeing momentum with successful innovation launches, including Garden Veggie flavor and Celestial Seasonings Sleepytime with melatonin and Throcooler and the new Earth Best Immunity Boost In addition, we are progressing our channel expansion strategy in margin-accretive channels. Year-to-date, Away-From-Home revenues have grown 13% in North America and 8% internationally. And as you see on the slide, in the third quarter, we drove dollar share shift in channel mix to food, convenience, mass and e-commerce. As for the grow pillar in the last call, we said we expected to pivot to growth in the overall business for the back half of this fiscal year and 85% of our business has grown over 3% year-to-date, in line with our Hain Reimagined growth algorithm. Offsetting this growth are double-digit declines in the remaining 15% of our business, which is targeted for stabilization, including baby formula. Specifically, in the third quarter, softness year-over-year was driven by the U.S. region, primarily by the personal care category where we recently announced significant portfolio and manufacturing footprint simplification as a part of the stabilization plan. In addition, we faced continued challenges in our infant formula supply driven by Perrigo's operational shutdowns to ensure their ability to meet FDA guidelines for safe and assured supply. You'll recall that in February, we stated that we had received a commitment to rebuild our formula supply in the second half of fiscal 2024. While we understand Perrigo's interventions and investments to drive quality controlled and reliable manufacturing, these actions and corresponding allocation of supply have had a material adverse impact on our business. We have been working closely with Perrigo to ensure we recover as quickly as possible to meet the needs of the consumers who love our Earth’s Best brand. they are committed to a full recovery beginning in the second half of 2024. We believe these 2 issues are short term in nature and are working swiftly to correct them. Let's review our brand and category performance. As I mentioned, in aggregate, our grow and maintain brands, excluding formula, which together account for approximately 85% of our revenues year-to-date are growing. Net sales were up 1% in the third quarter. Our stabilized brands, along with formula, are the source of the softness with net sales down 25% in the quarter. As a reminder, the grow category should expect to receive disproportionate investment and deliver better than category growth and share gains. Maintain businesses are an important of our portfolio, but do not require outsized investments to enable their growth. And those businesses ring-fenced and stabilized are both underperforming and require focused effort to stabilize and provide optionality. Once stabilized, we will determine where and if they fit within the Hain portfolio. In snacks, net sales for the third quarter were essentially flat year-over-year, which is an improvement from the second quarter. The main driver of the improvement was strength in Garden Veggie and the successful Flavor Birth Innovation launch, which is still ramping up. Offsetting Garden Veggie strength with softness in Terra as it is taking longer than expected to expand our channel mix outside of prior concentration in a low-margin channel. As we build upon the brand, we know the Terra consumer loves this product. and the brand is without a clear substitute. Our investments in supply chain capacity now put us in a comfortable position to leverage that brand love with expanded distribution. Driving distribution expansion remains a key strategy for growth in snacks. We have identified significant fair share opportunities by driving the core assortment of our products, and we believe we are in a position to fix our mix to unlock both distribution and velocity across our brands. This summer, we will leverage our better-for-you snacks portfolio of brands in our Savor Year Summer Snacking promotion our first-ever national multi-brand merchandising program. In Baby and Kids, net sales were essentially flat year-over-year, excluding formula. Despite the challenges of formula supply, we continue to see strength in our baby business, where we have leading brands in Earth Best and Ella’s Kitchen. In fact, Earth’s Best grew dollar share in the quarter in natural cereal, pouches and toddler snacks, and distribution was up double digits versus a year ago. In the U.K., Ella’s Kitchen is the clear leading brand, and we have had success leveraging our global baby category teams to share insights, innovation and commercial strategies across both of our brands with a robust opportunity pipeline for fiscal 2025. The beverage category continued its positive momentum with third quarter net sales of high-single-digits year-over-year, our fourth consecutive quarter of growth. Growth has been driven by both Celestial Seasonings Tea and non-dairy beverage. Within Celestial Seasonings, we are outpacing the category in gaining share due to the lastly gains and brand building and end market data shows our promotional list on tea is outpacing the category in the quarter. Non-dairy beverage have continue to deliver growth led by own label and the Natumi and [indiscernible] brands in Europe are focusing on innovation. The non-dairy beverage market and our core geography is an attractive space with strong consumer demand in overall category growth, up mid-single digits in value and low double digits in volume. And we are adding shifts to meet new contracts and increase demand. Our success in non-dairy veverage is an example of progress from the end-to-end rigor applied to our stabilized brands. From supply chain reliability to portfolio optimization, brand building innovation, and channel expansion, this coordinated effort is enabling us to shift the non-dairy beverage business from the stabilized category and into maintain, and we are well positioned in branded and own label to drive growth. Meal Prep net sales declined low single digits in the quarter, primarily driven by plant-based meat-free. While the overall plant-based meat-free category is still struggling in the market, the Eves brand in Canada continues to outperform the category and gain share. For the Linda McCartney Foods brand, we have made both portfolio and operations changes to reduce costs and increase efficiency. In contrast, soup continues to be one of our best performing categories with strong growth in our branded soups in both the U.K. and in North America. And finally, net sales and personal care. Our smallest category declined over 30%. Our brands have struggled with over proliferation of SKUs across many subcategories that simply haven't been productive for either our retail partners or Hain. We are hyper-focused on the execution of our stabilization plan. This shrink to grow turnaround plan is expected to add 11 points to gross margins and provide overall business optionality going forward. While stabilization is taking a bit longer than initially expected, it does not change our near-term strategy. As you can see, we have taken a number of actions to deliver progress towards our Hain Reimagined goals. We set a high bar for change for ourselves when we announced our strategy in September. And while we may not be where we expected to be at this time, we are confident. [Technical Difficulty]