I will give you an overview of our fourth quarter financial results, provide more color on revenue, expenses, earnings, and updates on our balance sheet and capital deployment, and then discuss our outlook going forward. Before I get into the details of the financial performance, let me provide a high-level view of how the fourth quarter played out. During the fourth quarter, Illumina's revenue of $1.16 billion came in above our expectations, driven by strength in our clinical consumables revenue, better-than-expected NovaSeq X placements, and outperformance in China. We also saw a small benefit from some year-end budget purchasing. The higher revenue resulted in margins and EPS both coming in ahead of our guidance while also reflecting the benefits of the cost actions we took earlier in the year. Now let me provide you the details. During the fourth quarter, Illumina's revenue of $1.16 billion was up 5% year over year on a reported basis and 4% on a constant currency basis. Greater China revenue of $55 million was ahead of expectations and represented a $25 million decline from 2024. Excluding Greater China, Illumina revenue was up 7% year over year. Sequencing consumables revenue of $755 million was up 8% year over year and up 11% excluding China. High throughput volume growth drove the strength in consumables as customers across research and clinical ramped utilization of their NovaSeq X instruments. More broadly, the clinical market maintained its momentum, growing 20% outside of China, driven by broader adoption of NGS-based testing and customers converting current assays to ones that require significantly more sequencing data, such as transitions from whole exome to whole genome sequencing in oncology and genetic disease. Consumable sales in research and applied markets were roughly flat year over year in the quarter, a notable improvement versus Q3, but still below historical levels due to continued uncertainty in the funding environment. Roughly 80% of the volumes and year-over-year pricing dynamics related to conversion to the X. As of Q4, 55% of the revenue has transitioned to the NovaSeq X. The research transition is nearing its end, as now roughly 90% of the high throughput sequencing volumes for these customers have transitioned to 2026. Clinical volume is now more than two-thirds converted to the X, and we believe pricing dynamics going forward will be tied more to new applications like whole genome sequencing adoption, which drives higher volumes. Given these two dynamics, near-complete conversion within research, clinical volume growth driven by X, we expect the conversion to be substantially complete by 2026. On sequencing activity, total sequencing GB output on our connected high and mid throughput instruments grew at a rate of more than 30% year over year, driven by robust strength in clinical, but more muted growth among our research customers. Sequencing instruments revenue of $154 million was approximately flat year over year in Q4 and up 3% ex-China, driven by strong placements of NovaSeq X and the 100. Similar to our consumable mix, over 60% of X systems placed in Q4 were to clinical customers. In Greater China, our instruments business was down 55% due to export restrictions. Globally, we placed over 100 NovaSeq Xs, including about five on rental or lease contracts, bringing our total active installed base to 890 instruments. Sequencing service and other revenue of $157 million was up approximately 3% year over year and up 4% ex-China. Strategic partnerships and the timing of data deals have been lumpy in 2025, and we were pleased to see a return to growth in Q4. Moving to the rest of the P&L, non-GAAP gross margin of 67% for the fourth quarter was down 40 basis points year over year, primarily from the tariff impact of 205 basis points. Excluding tariffs, gross margins improved by 165 basis points sequentially. Q4 margins reflect the typical instruments non-GAAP operating expenses heavy quarter in Q4. Operating expenses were $502 million, down 5% or $24 million year over year, reflecting the results of the multiyear cost reduction programs and prioritization of key growth investments. Non-GAAP operating margin was 23.7% in Q4, expanding 400 basis points year over year. Operating profit grew approximately 26% year over year, reflecting increased operating leverage from the improved cost structure. Looking at our results below the line, non-GAAP other expense, which is largely comprised of net interest expense, was $16 million, and the non-GAAP tax rate was 19.5%. We continue to assess long-term tax structure optimization to balance US R&D benefits with efficient credit utilization across jurisdictions. Our average diluted shares were approximately 154 million, 6 million lower than '24, reflecting share repurchases throughout the year. Altogether, non-GAAP EPS of $1.35 per diluted share grew approximately 42% year over year and came in above our guidance range and was higher than our initial estimate disclosed in January. Moving to cash flow, balance sheet, and capital allocation items for the quarter. Cash flow provided by operations was $321 million for the quarter and $1.1 billion for the year. Capital expenditures were $54 million, and free cash flow for the year was $267 million for Q4. CapEx was $148 million, and free cash flow was $931 million. In Q4, we repurchased 337,000 shares of Illumina stock, approximately $42 million at an average price of $124.12 per share. At quarter end, we had $643 million remaining on our share repurchase authorization, and we intend to continue to repurchase shares opportunistically. Subsequent to the end of Q4, we closed the acquisition of Somalogic on January 30, for an upfront payment of $350 million plus potential royalties and milestone payments subject to customary adjustments. We funded the upfront payment with cash on hand. We ended the quarter with approximately $1.63 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments, and gross leverage of approximately 1.6 times gross debt to last twelve months EBITDA. So recapping the full year 2025, starting with revenue. We returned to growth ex-China in Q3 and grew sales about 4% in the second half of the year. I'm extremely proud of the whole Illumina team for navigating through a very dynamic year to end the year on a high note. Through disciplined execution and cost optimization, we were able to expand margins nearly 200 basis points in 2025 despite approximately 200 basis points in macro-related headwinds. And finally, grew EPS by 16%, and our 2025 EPS of $4.84 came in above the original guidance we gave at the start of the year. The way we closed out 2025 gives me confidence about the progress we are making towards our long-range targets, and I'm excited about our momentum going into 2026. Now moving to guidance for the year 2026. Starting with revenue, we're expecting revenue of $4.5 billion to $4.6 billion, representing ex-China organic growth of 2% to 4%. Organic growth excludes the impact of currency, which is expected to add roughly one point to our reported growth, and revenue associated with the Somalogic acquisition, which is expected to add 1.5 to two points of revenue growth in 2026. China sales are expected to be a one-point headwind to total company revenue growth. On a reported basis, overall revenue is expected to be up 4% to 6%. For the rest of the world, organic sequencing revenue growth, we're expecting low to mid-single-digit growth in consumables, with clinical growing double-digit to mid-teens driven by continued strong volumes from our clinical customers. We're excited about the significant progress our customers are making with growth in their on-market tests and new sequencing-intensive whole genome approaches. We expect research declining mid to high single digits. Recent NIH budget announcements are a welcome development, and as fund flow resumes, could provide a more favorable environment relative to what we are assuming in guidance. Instrument sales are expected to be down low single digits to flat year over year, and we believe our goal of placing 50 to 60 NovaSeq X instruments per quarter on average will continue through 2026. Our pull-through assumptions by platform can be found in our earnings presentation. In China, we expect sales of $210 to $220 million with little or no step-up in instrument sales in the first half of the year. We will revisit our assumptions as we work with the government about our ability to import instruments into the country. Moving to operating margins, excluding Somalogic, we are guiding for operating margins to expand 130 basis points next year, at midpoint. Somalogic is expected to have a 100 basis point impact on margins. All in for 2026, we are expecting operating margins of between 23.3% and 23.5%. We've made significant progress in improving Illumina operating margins and remain focused on achieving our 2027 targets. Now moving to EPS. Excluding Somalogic, we're projecting EPS to grow 10% at the midpoint. Somalogic is expected to be dilutive by $0.18 at midpoint. Hence, total Illumina 2026 EPS guidance is in the range of $5.00 to $5.20. For Q1 2026, we're expecting rest of world organic revenue growth of 1% to 3%, equating to between $1.06 and $1.08 billion. We're expecting Q1 EPS of $1.02 to $1.07, including $0.04 of dilution. Rest of the details of our Q1 and 2026 guidance can be found in our earnings presentation. One housekeeping item: Starting in January 2026, we changed the geographical reporting segments to better align with the respective commercial organization structure. Beginning in Q1, we will report our new geographical segments and will provide historical financial reconciliation for the new structure. In closing, I want to once again express my sincere appreciation to the Illumina team for their continued focus and disciplined execution throughout the quarter. We enter 2026 with a lot of momentum, and I'm extremely encouraged by the progress we've made in returning Illumina to long-term sustainable revenue and earnings growth. Thank you for joining our call today. I will now invite the operator to open the line for Q&A.