Thanks, Lance, and good afternoon, everyone. I will start by reviewing the results of the two brands individually and then provide details on our fourth quarter 2025 consolidated performance and 2026 guidance. Beginning with Jack in the Box, our fourth quarter system same-store sales declined 7.4%, franchise same-store sales decreased 7.6%, and company-owned same-store sales were down 5.3%. This result included a decrease in transactions and negative mix, partially offset by a 2.4% increase in price. As Lance mentioned, we did see improvement throughout the quarter, ending Q4 roughly 300 basis points stronger than we started the quarter. Turning to restaurant count. For the fourth quarter, there were 15 Jack restaurant openings and 47 closures, and we ended the year with 2,136 restaurants. Jack restaurant level margin for the quarter decreased year over year by 240 basis points to 16.1%. The margin decrease was driven by sales deleverage, commodity inflation of 6.9%, elevated labor costs as a result of opening eight new restaurants in Chicago. Food and packaging costs as a percentage of company-owned sales remained flat at 30.3% as a result of favorable funding from our new beverage contract as well as price increases, offset by commodity inflation and negative mix as consumers shifted into price-pointed promotions as Lance mentioned. From a commodity standpoint, our largest inflationary category was beef, consistent with industry trends. Labor costs as a percentage of company-owned sales increased 100 basis points to 33.7% primarily due to the elevated labor at our new restaurant openings in Chicago, partially offset by a reversal of additional fee-to-taxes in California. Jack in the Box opened eight restaurants within twelve weeks in Chicago, which was one of the fastest new market openings we have completed in recent history. We are seeing excitement from customers around these openings, but there was a significant impact on our P&L for the quarter. The Chicago market had a negative 130 basis point drag on our overall company restaurant level margin. We are taking swift actions to improve the margin compression driven by this market. While volumes remain strong with annual unit volumes to exceed $2,000,000, labor costs were elevated this quarter as we staffed up the market to ensure first-time guests received the best possible experience. Occupancy and other operating costs as a percentage of company-owned sales increased 130 basis points to 19.9% primarily due to higher costs for rent, security, and third-party delivery fees. Franchise level margin was $62,600,000 or 38.9% of franchise revenues compared to $70,900,000 or 40.4% a year ago. The decrease was driven by lower franchise same-store sales and lapping $2,600,000 of nonrecurring lease termination revenue from franchisees, partially offset by higher early termination fees collected in connection with our closure program. For a quick update on Jack on Track, I will start with the restaurant block closure program. In Q4, we closed 38 restaurants under this initiative, all of which were franchise locations. Turning to real estate activity. We sold three real estate properties during the quarter, generating $4,800,000 in proceeds, which will be used to pay down debt. We also continue to reduce capital expenditures sequentially as we remain focused on disciplined capital allocation. And lastly, as announced in October, we entered into a material agreement to sell Del Taco. Overall, we are making progress on our Jack on Track plan every quarter. Now taking a look at Del Taco results. For Del Taco, system same-store sales declined 3.9% consisting of company-owned same-store sales down 3.1% and franchise same-store sales down 4.2%. This decline was driven by a decrease in transactions and an unfavorable mix, partially offset by a 2.8% increase in price. For the fourth quarter, there were four restaurant openings and 13 restaurant closures. Del Taco ended the year with a restaurant count of 576 locations. Del Taco restaurant level margin was 6.8%, as compared to 9.3% in the prior year. This decrease was primarily driven by the impact of opening locations in Colorado, transaction declines, inflationary increases in commodities, slightly offset by menu price increases. Food and packaging costs increased 260 basis points to 27.8% due to unfavorable mix and commodity inflation of 5.1%. Labor costs remained flat at 39% as elevated labor costs from the reopening of 17 locations in Colorado were offset by a reversal of additional fee-to-taxes in California. Occupancy and other costs decreased 10 basis points to 26.4% driven primarily by favorable utilities. Franchise level margin was $6,800,000 or 30% of franchise revenues compared to $6,000,000 or 26.5% in the prior year. The increase was driven by a lease buyout transaction and early termination penalties partially offset by lower sales and higher bad debt expense. Moving to our consolidated results. SG&A for the fourth quarter was $36,600,000 or 11.2% of revenues as compared to $30,000,000 or 8.6% a year ago. The increase was primarily driven by the $5,500,000 incremental advertising contribution we made during the quarter, higher information technology costs, the rollover of favorable insurance claim development factors from the prior year, and a decrease in COLI gains. These impacts were partially offset by lower share-based compensation and reduced incentive compensation tied to performance. Excluding the net COLI gains, along with company-owned marketing expenses, G&A was $27,000,000 or 2.4% of total system-wide sales. For the quarter, we spent approximately $3,900,000 in preopening costs. The majority of this investment supported new restaurant openings in Chicago for the Jack in the Box brand, with the remainder related to reopening the Colorado market for the Del Taco brand. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $45,600,000, down from $65,500,000 in the prior year due primarily to lower same-store sales at both brands. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA was $270,900,000, inside of our revised guidance range. GAAP diluted earnings per share was $0.30 for the quarter, compared to $1.12 in the prior year. Operating earnings per share, which includes certain adjustments, was $0.30 for the quarter versus $1.16 in the prior year. Our effective tax rate for the fourth quarter was negative 30.4% compared to 29.2% in the prior year quarter. The negative rate this quarter was primarily driven by incremental nontaxable gains from the market performance of insurance products used to fund certain nonqualified retirement plans along with favorable state audit accruals recorded during the period. The non-GAAP operating EPS tax rate for 2025 was 11.9% and was 25.4% for the full fiscal year. The lower non-GAAP operating EPS tax rate for the fourth quarter was primarily due to favorable state audit accruals recorded in the quarter. Capital expenditures were $17,900,000 for the quarter. Cash flows from operations for the quarter were $33,700,000, and cash flows from operations for the full fiscal year were $162,300,000. We did not repurchase any shares in the fourth quarter. For the full year, we repurchased 100,000 shares for $5,000,000. As of year-end, we had $175,000,000 remaining under our board-authorized share repurchase program. We ended the year with an unrestricted cash balance of $51,500,000. We also had available borrowing capacity of $96,800,000. Our total debt at year-end was $1,700,000,000, with our net debt to adjusted EBITDA leverage ratio at six times. As we look to 2026, we want to share the standalone Jack business model. Del Taco results will be reflected in discontinued operations in our Q1 2026 financial statements, pending successful close of the sale, which we expect to occur within Q1. Upon close, we will be required to file pro forma financials presenting a three-year look back of what our results would have been without Del Taco. After this, we plan to host a call with our analyst community to walk through the standalone model and assumptions in more detail. Before getting into specifics, I do want to reiterate the primary source of uncertainty in our 2026 outlook: the timing of our Jack on Track initiatives. Restaurant closures may shift based on factors such as franchisee readiness, lease dynamics, and market conditions. Similarly, while we do expect real estate proceeds during 2026, the exact timing of those transactions will depend on market conditions and our pace alongside our debt pay-down plans. Both of these add a level of variability to our sales, restaurant counts, and franchise level margin estimates for the year, and thus impact our overall adjusted EBITDA expectations. Please know our guidance reflects our current best assumptions. We will provide more color on this throughout the year as our assumptions update. Now to specific guidance. We expect to end fiscal 2026 between 2,050 restaurants to 2,100 restaurants. We expect same-store sales of negative 1% to positive 1% versus the prior year. Please keep in mind as you model company sales that you factor in our new market of Chicago, which will not be included in same-store sales but is expected to have AUVs above $2,000,000. We expect company restaurant level margin of 17% to 18%. This includes mid-single-digit commodity inflation largely driven by beef. Keep in mind, we are also rolling over a favorable beverage contract benefit from 2025. Restaurant level margin guidance also includes low single-digit wage inflation and our expectation for continued margin compression in the first quarter driven by our Chicago market. We expect franchise level margin of $275,000,000 to $290,000,000. Franchise level margin is the most impacted area on the P&L from Jack on Track through both closures and real estate sales. Like we mentioned on our last call, we expect a negative impact to franchise level margin of approximately $80,000 per closure. With a closure range of 60 to 100, this equates to roughly $4.8 to $8,000,000 on an annualized basis. As a reminder, franchise level margin also had a benefit in fiscal 2025 of $5,200,000 tied to rent spread monetization transactions with franchisees related to right of first refusal. We expect SG&A expenses of $125,000,000 to $135,000,000, accounting for roughly $31,000,000 in Del Taco specific G&A and advertising, as well as impacts of incremental Jack in the Box marketing spend, COLI gains, favorable share-based compensation, and lower incentive compensation in 2025. A comparable SG&A figure for fiscal 2025 is $134,000,000. For fiscal 2026, G&A, excluding selling and advertising, is expected to be approximately 2.5% of system-wide sales. We expect this to remain elevated for the first half of the year and then improve into the back half as we restructure following the sale of Del Taco. Similar to prior divestitures, we will enter into a transition services agreement or TSA, and we expect income to offset some of our G&A as part of that agreement. This guidance does not reflect that benefit, and we will share more as we learn the total TSA amount and timing. We expect preopening costs of less than half a million dollars and depreciation and amortization of $45 to $50,000,000. Adjusted EBITDA for the full year is expected to be $225,000,000 to $240,000,000. And finally, as part of the Jack on Track plan, we expect to pay down $263,000,000 in debt by retiring the August 2026 tranche of our securitization proceeds from the Del Taco divestiture, cash on hand, proceeds from real estate sales, and potentially borrowings on our VFN to preserve flexibility. We recognize that rebuilding takes time, and 2026 is about executing against Jack on Track and restoring momentum for the Jack in the Box brand. You have our commitment to transparency and to maintaining financial rigor as we make decisions that impact our guests, employees, franchisees, and shareholders. We look forward to speaking with you again in February as we release first quarter results. And with that, operator, please feel free to open the line for Q&A. We respectfully request that you limit questions to one and one follow-up. Our first question comes from the line of Brian Bittner with Oppenheimer. Your line is open.