Thank you, Jaime, and thanks to everyone for joining us this morning. In the first quarter, we delivered adjusted EBITDAre of $514 million, an increase of 5.1% over last year, and adjusted FFO per share of $0.64, an increase of 4.9% over last year. First quarter adjusted EBITDAre and adjusted FFO per share benefited from $10 million of business interruption proceeds related to Hurricanes Helene and Milton, which is the same amount we recognized in the first quarter of 2024 related to Hurricane Ian. Comparable hotel total RevPAR improved 5.8% compared to the first quarter of 2024 and comparable hotel RevPAR improved 7%, driven by strong rate growth. Comparable hotel EBITDA margin improved by 30 basis points year-over-year to 31.8% as revenue growth outpaced expenses due to higher rates. As a reminder, the operational results discussed today refer to our 79 hotel comparable portfolio in 2025 which excludes the Alila Ventana Big Sur and the Don CeSar. Additionally, this quarter, we are referring to revenue growth for our business mix segments as RevPAR growth due to the leap year in 2024. Turning to business mix. RevPAR growth in the first quarter was better than expected, driven by increases in room rates. We saw particularly strong performance in Washington, D.C., New York, New Orleans, Los Angeles and Maui. Transient RevPAR grew by 6%, driven by resorts which benefited from a late Easter. Our 3 Maui Resorts accounted for almost half of the transient RevPAR growth in the quarter, alongside strong performance in New York and Los Angeles. Digging deeper into Maui, the leisure transient recovery continued, driving Maui's strong results in the first quarter. Transient rooms sold were up approximately 70% year-over-year. Growth in revenues from transient guest more than offset declines from tough group comparisons in the first quarter of 2024, which included revenue from recovery and relief groups as well as elevated group cancellation revenue. Maui's 16% RevPAR growth in the first quarter provided a 70 basis point benefit to portfolio RevPAR growth. Total RevPAR at our Green Maui Resort was also up nearly 7%. Due to strong outlet growth and increases in golf and spa revenue, despite collecting $8 million in attrition and cancellation revenue last year. Taken together, we are encouraged that the recovery is well underway in Maui. Business transient RevPAR grew 2%, driven by rate growth as we saw a favorable market mix and a continued shift from government to corporate negotiated customers in the first quarter. Group RevPAR for the quarter was up 7% year-over-year as special events, the Easter holiday shift and strong corporate group bookings in major markets drove group rate growth. Our property sold 1.1 million group room nights in the first quarter, bringing our definite group room nights on the books for 2025 to $3.6 million or 85% of comparable full year 2024 group room nights and total group revenue pace is up 3.3% to the same time last year. Turning to ancillary spend. RevPAR growth outpaced total RevPAR growth in the first quarter. Rate growth achieved around special events such as the inauguration and the Super Bowl drove outsized RevPAR growth in the first quarter. While the decline in attrition and cancellation revenue due to Maui's tough comparison muted total RevPAR growth. Despite a challenging comparison, we still saw solid growth in food and beverage and other revenues. F&B RevPAR grew 5%, driven by both banquet and outlet growth and other revenue per available room grew 2% despite a meaningful decline in attrition and cancellation revenue. Turning to the Don CeSar. We were thrilled to welcome guests back to the resort in late March after a 6-month remediation efforts following Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Our team leveraged strong industry relationships and lessons learned from the Ritz-Carlton Naples to enhance amenities and rebuild infrastructure to increase resilience, including elevating critical equipment and systems. The Don CeSar holds a cherish place in the hearts of hotel employees in the St. Pete Beach community. In fact, the majority of associates returned after 6 months, a testament to their resilience, loyalty and commitment to the Don CeSar. Since the reopening, we are seeing stronger-than-anticipated transient demand, higher average checks in our temporary F&B outlets, increased demand for spa services and a greater number of club members reactivating membership. As a reminder, we currently estimate our total property damage and remediation costs as the Don CeSar will be between $100 million and $110 million, and our insurance deductibles are $20 million. We collected $10 million of business interruption proceeds in the first quarter. While we expect to collect additional business interruption proceeds, it is too early to estimate the timing or amount of additional payments. Turning to capital allocation. During the first quarter, we repurchased 6.3 million shares of common stock at an average price of $15.79 per share for a total of $100 million. Since 2022, we have repurchased $415 million of stock at an average repurchase price of $16.16 per share, we have $585 million of remaining capacity under our Board-authorized share repurchase program. Turning to portfolio reinvestment. During the first quarter, we completed comprehensive renovations at the Grand Hyatt Atlanta and Buckhead, marking the first completion of 6 properties in the Hyatt Transformational Capital Program. We also completed and reopened a 2-story rotating restaurant lounge on the 48th floor of the New York Marriott Marquis as well as Aviv, a new restaurant on the lobby level of the 1 Hotel South Beach. We continue to make progress on the condo development at the Four Seasons Resort Orlando at Walt Disney World. We expect to complete the mid-rise condominium building and begin closing on sales in the fourth quarter of this year. We now have deposits and purchase agreements for 16 of the 40 units. In 2025, our capital expenditure guidance range is $580 million to $670 million, which includes between $70 million and $80 million for property damage reconstruction majority of which we expect to be covered by insurance. Our CapEx guidance also reflects approximately $270 million to $315 million of investment for redevelopment, repositioning and ROI projects. With the highest transformational capital program, we expect to complete renovations at the Hyatt Regency Austin and the Hyatt Regency Capitol Hill in the second half of this year. As a reminder, we expect to benefit from approximately $27 million of operating profit guarantees related to the Hyatt Transformational Capital Program this year which we expect will offset the majority of the EBITDA disruption at those properties. Other major ROI projects this year include the construction of The Phoenician Canyon Suites Villa expansion and the Don CeSar borrower expansion, which we expect to complete in the first quarter of 2025. In addition to our capital expenditure investment, we expect to spend $75 million to $85 million on the condo development at the Four Seasons Resort Orlando at Walt Disney World this year. Looking back at prior renovations, we completed 24 transformational renovations between 2018 and 2023, and which we believe are continuing to provide meaningful tailwinds for our portfolio. Of the 19 hotels that have stabilized post renovation operations to date, the average RevPAR index share gain is over 8.9 points, which is well in excess of our targeted gain of 3 to 5 points. As of the first quarter, we are excited to share that all 16 of the Marriott Transformational Capital Program Comprehensive Renovations have stabilized and are meaningfully contributing to our portfolio performance. As evidenced by our first quarter results, our capital allocation decisions over the past few years continue to serve us well. Turning to our outlook for 2025, while we outperformed our expectations in the first quarter, we remain cautious given the heightened macroeconomic uncertainty. Demand trends appear to be holding for now but the potential for deteriorating lodging fundamentals has increased. Based on the information we have today, we are maintaining our comparable hotel RevPAR guidance range with a slight reduction to total RevPAR driven by moderating trends in group lead volume. As Sourav will discuss in more detail, the low end of our guidance range contemplates a mild slowdown while the high end assumes a more stable macroeconomic environment. In preparing our guidance, we look to prior downturns, including the recession in the early 1990s, the 2008 financial crisis and the pandemic, which had the most severe impact on the lodging industry. As a result of the wide range of potential economic outcomes, we are also providing an approximate rule of thumb for the current environment based on how our portfolio is positioned today. For every 100 basis point change in RevPAR, we would expect to see a $32 million to $37 million change and adjusted EBITDAre. In times like this, it is important to remember that Host is well positioned to weather any environment and continue to thrive, as a result of our fortress investment-grade balance sheet, a leverage ratio of 2.8x, our access to capital, our size and scale, our diversified business and geographic mix our continued reinvestment in our portfolio. We will continue to utilize our competitive advantages, be disciplined in our capital allocation approach and position Host to outperform in the current environment and over the long term. With that, I will now turn the call over to Sourav.