Thank you, Julien. Good morning everyone. It's great to be back with everyone today. I'm looking forward to reconnecting with many of you over the coming days and weeks. I'm grateful for the opportunity to come back to Helen Troy and work with such a dedicated team of associates and friends. I'm also grateful for the opportunities that I see in front of the company, and I intend to do everything I can to maximize them during my time here. I will touch on some of these opportunities later in my discussion of our outlook for fiscal 2024 and beyond. We just navigated a difficult year, but I believe we have emerged an even stronger, better structured, and more integrated operating company poised to reaccelerate the flywheel. Before I begin, I want to recognize and thank Matt Osberg for all he has done for the company over the last seven years and for helping me transition back into the interim role. Matt, it's hard for me to express how much I've appreciated your support, then and now. You will be missed, but I'm proud of you and I'm happy for you and your family. With that, I would like to start with an overview of our fourth quarter results then provide an update on Project Pegasus and then discuss our outlook for fiscal 2024 and beyond. Before I do, please note that in line with the changes in our business structure and our financial reporting, I will be discussing results for our two reportable segments; Beauty & Wellness and Home & Outdoor. You can find recast quarterly historical financial information for the past three fiscal years on a two-segment basis, in the earnings release, we issued after the market closed yesterday. As Julien mentioned, the fourth quarter was above our sales and earnings expectations with strong year-over-year expansion and inventory reduction ahead of our target, which contributed to better than expected cash flow. Consolidated net sales decreased 16.7%, reflecting lower consumer demand, shifts in spending patterns, and reduced orders from retail customers due to their inventory reduction efforts. The sales comparison was also unfavorably impacted by the pull forward of approximately $20 million into the fourth quarter of last year as retailers accelerated orders in advance of price increases. These factors were partially offset by an increase in Prestige, Personal and Hair Care sales, customer price increases related to rising freight and product costs, as well as 1oneadditional month of Osprey sales and a three-month contribution from the Curlsmith acquisition. Stepping back to look at the full year, fiscal 2023 core business revenue is significantly higher than our pre-COVID base, with a three-year CAGR of 8.7%. While this includes some impact from acquisitions, it also includes remarkable macro challenges and shifts in the consumer landscape. We believe that with the work we have done related to acquisitions, divestitures, distribution capability investments, portfolio enhancement, and organizational restructuring over the last three years, we have built an engine for sustained growth and operational excellence. As I will discuss later, we expect to continue to lower our leverage ratio by the end of fiscal 2024 and our recent strategic investments will largely be paid for. This will position us to use all the levers of our flywheel once again with an underlying engine that has greater horsepower. GAAP consolidated operating margin for the quarter was 11.1% of net sales compared to 8.7% in the same period last year. We were pleased to expand adjusted operating margin by 130 basis points to 13.8% despite unfavorable operating leverage. The primary drivers of this improvement were a decrease in incentive compensation expense, lower outbound freight costs, the favorable impact of the Curlsmith acquisition and decreased marketing expense. These factors were partially offset by the unfavorable operating leverage I just mentioned, higher inventory reserves, a less favorable product and channel mix within Home & Outdoor, and the less favorable product mix in Wellness. On a segment basis, Home & Outdoor adjusted operating margin increased 400 basis points to 17.1%, reflecting the impact of pricing actions, lower incentive compensation expense, and lower inventory reserves. Adjusted operating margin for our Beauty & Wellness segment declined 90 basis points, driven by unfavorable operating leverage, higher inventory reserves, and a less favorable product mix in Wellness. Looking at the Legacy Beauty and Health & Wellness businesses, both saw adjusted operating margin declines similar to the overall segment. Net income was $36.2 million or $1.50 per diluted share. Non-GAAP adjusted diluted EPS decreased 19.9% to $2.01 per diluted share, primarily due to higher interest expense and lower adjusted operating income. These factors were partially offset by a lower effective tax rate in lower shares outstanding. We generated $158.7 million of operating cash flow in the quarter, a significant improvement both sequentially and year-over-year. Improvement was driven by a sequential decline in inventory of $81.3 million. Inventory at the end of fiscal 2023 was $455 million, well below our target of $500 million, despite the headwinds of lower consumer demand, significant retailer inventory corrections, and our acquisitions of Osprey and Curlsmith. We expect to further lower inventory to $400 million or below by the end of fiscal 2024. On a full year basis, we generated operating cash flow of $208.2 million and free cash flow of $33.4 million as we deployed $147 million in CapEx toward our new distribution facility, which is now in operation. We ended the fiscal year with total debt of $934.4 million, a sequential decline of approximately $146 million. Our net leverage ratio improved to 2.8 times compared to 3.1 times at the end of the third quarter. At the end of fiscal 2023, our debt covenants allowed for up to $363 million of additional debt. However, a key focus for fiscal 24 is to continue to reduce inventory, fine-tune other working capital components, and use our strong cash flow to further pay down our debt. As of the end of fiscal 2023, we have significantly reduced our exposure to interest rate volatility by swapping $425 million of our outstanding variable rate debt to fixed rates that are favorable to current market rates. I will cover our fiscal 2024 free cash flow, debt, and leverage expectations later in my discussion of our outlook. As Noel shared earlier, we made good progress on our Pegasus initiative We are using Pegasus to create greater operating efficiency, a more effective go-to-market structure, expand our margins, and provide a platform to fund step level increases in growth investments and better leverage our scale. We remain on track to achieve our fiscal 2024 total savings and timing targets with significant additional savings expected from lower inbound freight costs. Now, turning to our outlook for fiscal 2024. We expect consolidated sales between $1.965 billion and $2.015 billion in fiscal 2024. This implies a decline of 5.2% to 2.8%, which includes a year-over-year decline of $35 million or 1.7% from the removal of Bed Bath & Beyond revenue from our outlook and a similar size reduction from our Pegasus SKU rationalization initiative, primarily impacting Beauty & Wellness. Our sales outlook reflects what we believe will be a continued slower economy and uncertainty in consumer spending patterns as choppers seek to prioritize value, especially for discretionary categories in this inflationary environment. The likelihood, timing and potential impact of a significant or prolonged recession is unknown and cannot be reasonably estimated, therefore, it is not included in our outlook. Importantly, as Julien mentioned, we have seen some improvement in trade inventory on a sequential basis as many key retailers have reduced their inventory on hand. We do not anticipate a repeat of the significant destocking that took place last year and anticipate that sell in will more closely match sell through this fiscal year. Before I go into the segment expectations, I mentioned earlier that we removed any risk related to Bed Bath & Beyond from our revenue outlook. As it relates to our balance sheet, our current accounts receivable balance is approximately $2.9 million and our preliminary estimate of what might be considered preferential payments is approximately $1 million to $1.5 million. Turning back to our net sales outlook by segment, we expect a Home & Outdoor decline of 1.7% to growth of 1% and a Beauty & Wellness decline of 8% to 5.8%. We expect consolidated GAAP diluted EPS of $3.98 to $4.84, which includes estimated restructuring charges of $2.75 to $2.43. We expect consolidated non-GAAP adjusted diluted EPS in the range of $8.50 to $9, which implies a consolidated decline of 10.1% to 4.8%. Our adjusted diluted EPS outlook includes an increase in interest and depreciation expense totaling approximately $0.91 net of tax, or a 9.6% growth headwind. At the high end of our range, we expect gross margin to expand approximately 460 basis points as we improve our overall margin mix and realize the benefit of lower commodity and inbound freight costs. We're pleased to provide an outlook with operational earnings growth despite unfavorable operating leverage. At the high end of our range, consolidated adjusted operating income is expected to grow 2.6% and margin is expected to expand by 80 basis points. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA is expected to grow 6.3% and margin is expected to expand 150 basis points at the high end of our range, despite incremental incentive compensation expense of approximately $27 million year-over-year, which represents an 8.2% growth headwind and 135 basis point margin headwind. Our outlook for operational earnings growth is driven by a better overall margin mix, lower commodity and inbound freight costs, and cost savings from Pegasus. We expect Pegasus to be a force multiplier with benefits in fiscal 2024 to include initial cost savings, organizational and go-to-market effectiveness, more efficient and effective marketing spend, and optionality to consider to incremental growth investments during the year. We continue to expect Pegasus to generate savings of approximately $20 million in fiscal 2024, with additional savings expected from lower inbound freight and commodity costs. The benefits from inbound freight and commodity costs are generally expected to be realized in the second half of our fiscal year as we move through the cycle of turning inventory through cost of goods sold. As previously discussed, the Pegasus savings will partially offset several structural headwinds in fiscal 2024 including incremental depreciation of approximately $12 million before tax related to our new state-of-the-art distribution facility, higher annual incentive compensation expense of approximately $27 million before tax as we reinstate expected expense at target performance, and higher interest expense of approximately $15 million before tax as we annualize the increase in interest rates in fiscal 2023. This includes our expectation of an incremental rate increase of 100 basis points in fiscal 2024. We expect the fiscal 2024 GAAP effective tax rate of 19% to 21% and an adjusted effective tax rate of 13.1% to 13.2%. We do not expect a meaningful impact in fiscal 2024 from currently proposed tax legislation changes by the Biden Administration or international regulators. At this stage, it is still unclear what domestic and global tax laws will be passed in what form and on what timing. We will continue to assess the impacts as proposed legislation is considered and keep you updated. In terms of the quarterly cadence, we expect the majority of our net sales growth to be concentrated in the third quarter of fiscal 2024. We expect net sales to decline approximately 9% to 7% in the first quarter and 7% to 5% in the second quarter. We expect adjusted diluted EPS growth to be concentrated in the third and fourth quarters of fiscal 2024 as we benefit from lower inbound freight and commodity costs, as I mentioned earlier. We also expect to realize the benefits of debt deleveraging more fully in the second half of the year. Accordingly, we expect a decline in adjusted diluted EPS of just under 30% in both the first and second quarters of fiscal 2024 with near offsetting growth in the second half of the year. We expect capital asset expenditures of between $45 million and $50 million for fiscal 2024, which includes approximately $25 million for the completion of our new distribution facility and the full installation of the state-of-the-art automation equipment. We continue to expect that the final cost of the facility and its equipment will be within our original expectations. With lower CapEx needs in fiscal 2024, we expect free cash flow to be in the range of $250 million to $270 million and our net leverage ratio as defined in our credit agreement is expected to end fiscal 2024 in the range of two times to 1.85 times. With the opening of our new distribution facility, we are in a position to further optimize our footprint, which we believe could unlock in additional $100 million to $125 million of cash flow that is not currently included in our outlook. Looking beyond fiscal 2024, we believe we can drive further meaningful performance improvement. Starting with Pegasus, the bulk of the savings are expected to further expand margin and fuel significant growth investments. Our new organizational structure is designed to increase focus on additional retail distribution new product innovation, distribution facility footprint optimization, and enhanced direct-to-consumer capability. We believe our strong cash flow will allow us to continue to reduce our debt leverage and provide capital deployment optionality. In summary, turning back to fiscal 2024, we are pleased to provide an outlook that we believe is accretive to our valuation with strong free cash flow, operational earnings growth, and margin expansion, despite unfavorable operating leverage in a challenging consumer environment. Our adjusted EBITDA outlook at the high end of the range implies an EV to forward EBITDA multi of 8.4 times using Tuesday's market capitalization and our outstanding debt at the end of fiscal 2023. Our free cash flow outlook at the high end of the range implies a forward free cash flow yield of 13.6% at Tuesday's market capitalization. We believe these are compelling value metrics that compare favorably with our peer set and the market overall. With that, I'd like to turn it back to the operator for questions.