Thanks, Frank. Financial updates. Now let's shift to consumption activity and category updates. I will share some category and brand results with you for the quarter. As always, the market information I'll be referring to is Circana reported data and for today it is for the period ending June 16, 2024. When I refer to Q4, I'm referring to 13 weeks of the quarter ending June 16, 2024. References to changes in volume or price versus the corresponding period one year ago. We look at the category of Circana's total US definition, which includes food, drug, mass, Walmart, military and other outlets, unless otherwise specified. When we discuss pricing, we are referring to the average price per pound. Breakouts of the recipe, snack and produce nut sub-categories are based on our custom definitions developed in conjunction with Circana. The snack bar category is the syndicated view as defined by Circana. The term velocity refers to the sales per point of distribution. In the last quarter, we started to see stabilization in the broader snack category. Snack isle as defined by Circana declined 0.8 points in pounds and 0.3 points in dollars. This is an improvement versus the trends we were seeing in Q3. The total nut and trail mix category was down 2% in dollars and down 1% in pound volume in Q4. This is better performance than we saw last quarter. Nut and trail mix prices have moderated and price per pound declined 1% versus the prior year. We are still seeing consumers trade down to less expensive snacks, bar sizes and nut types and deal seek as broader food and essential prices remains elevated. Now we'll cover each subcategory in more depth, starting with recipe nuts. The recipe nut sub category was down 5% in dollars and 4% in pound sales. This is a decline in performance versus what we saw in Q3. Pricing is stable with both walnuts and pecans, the bulk of this subcategory being flat to slightly down on a price per pound basis. Our Fisher brand declined in Q4, driven mainly by velocity performance in the grocery channel. Fisher declined 11% in dollars and 9% in pounds, on par with the performance we saw in Q3. The brand was flat in the mass channel. Fisher is still the branded recipe nut leader, and we are actively working on ways to engage consumers with the right price pack architecture and promotions as we plan for this holiday season. Now let me turn to the snack subcategory. In Q4, the snack category was down 3% in dollar sales and down 2% in pound sales. This is an improvement versus the performance we saw in Q3. Pricing continues to stabilize and price is flat versus a year ago. Fisher snack performed mostly in a subcategory on 29% in dollars and 33% in pounds. This continues to be driven by significant distribution losses. We are actively working on new promotional plans and new products that give the consumers new exciting products with the value they are looking for. Private label snack nuts are performing consistent with the subcategory, down 4% in dollars and down 1% in pounds. The trail and snack mix subcategory was down 2% in dollars and down 2% in pounds in Q4, an improvement versus last quarter. Prices of trail mixes were flat versus a year ago. Our Southern style nut brand grew 2% in dollars and 6% in pounds, driven by strong velocity performance in mass and club. Private brands, the share leader in trail mix performed slightly worse than the subcategory, down 3% in dollars and pounds, driven by poor performance in the mass channel. Our last subcategory, produce nuts, declined 1% in dollars and grew 1% in pound volume in Q4, better than the performance we saw in Q3. Our produce nut brand, Orchard Valley Harvest, performed better than the subcategory, up 10% in dollar sales and 16% in pound sales, driven by velocity and distribution gains in the grocery channel. We are entering year two of our relaunch and are excited to introduce new products and pack sizes to continue momentum on this brand. Now we will switch to the snack bar category. In Q4, the snack bar category declined 6% in pounds and 4% in dollars. We are continuing to see the effect of the total recall of the major branded snack bar player earlier this year. Snack bar pricing increased by 2% in Q4. Private label borrowers continued to grow 14% in dollars and 12% in pounds. Private label bars continue to expand in stores, picking up 12% more in TDP distribution, while prices rose 2%. We continue to see positive momentum in private label in this category, with dollar share in the quarter, up 1.2 points versus last year. In closing, we see great opportunities to build our bar business and enter new snack bar segment with innovative products. Our Fisher recipe portfolio, the number one brand in the recipe category is well positioned for a successful holiday season coming up in Q2. We do continue to face challenges in the future on a macro level. which includes declining consumption trends in the snack category, also higher costs for chocolate and cashew nuts due to supply and demand. However, our sales and marketing, R&D and procurement teams are working with a sense of urgency to find solutions to overcome these headwinds. Through fiscal '23, the company achieved five consecutive years of record earnings. While we did not continue that performance trend this year, our teams accomplished so much in fiscal 2024 that will position JBSS for strong growth and profitability in the future. These results demonstrate the underlying strength and resilience of our company. These achievements are also a testament to the fortitude of our business model, the commitment of our people and the mutual trust and depth of our customer and supplier partnerships. We are executing our growth strategies, implementing continuous improvement projects throughout the company to optimize our cost structure. And we continue to invest in our brands and processes to better serve our customers and consumers and create value for our shareholders. We appreciate your participation in the call, and thank you for your interest in our company. I will now open the call to questions.