Our effective tax rate reflected an approximate $3,000,000 special item tax expense from the election of provisions for the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. This election also reduced tax payments by approximately $25,000,000 in the quarter which we expect to realize again in 2026. Excluding special items, our effective tax rate was 19.8%, which was 300 basis points higher versus the prior year's adjusted effective tax rate which benefited from a favorable mix of earnings and the timing of discrete items. We reported fourth quarter diluted earnings per share of $2.45. On an adjusted basis, earnings per share increased 3% to $2.65. Our earnings per share results include a $0.07 benefit from share repurchases and a $0.01 favorable impact from foreign exchange translation. Moving to our reportable segments on slide six. Americas Welding sales increased approximately 4% driven by 10.4% higher price and 60 basis points of favorable foreign exchange translation. Volumes declined approximately 7% primarily from the automation portfolio which had a challenging prior year comparison. While automation order rates accelerated in the fourth quarter, and the segment has a strong backlog entering into 2026, revenue recognition is not expected to begin to ramp until the second quarter. The price increase reflects prior actions taken to address rising input costs. We anticipate price levels to hold sequentially in the first quarter prior to substantially anniversarying in the second quarter. We will continue to monitor trade policy decisions and take appropriate actions as needed. Americas Welding segment's fourth quarter adjusted EBIT increased 7% to $141,000,000. The adjusted EBIT margin increased 90 basis points to 20% primarily due to effective cost management, favorable mix, and $5,000,000 in permanent savings. We expect Americas Welding to continue to operate in the mid 18 to mid 19% EBIT margin range in 2026. Moving to slide seven, the 7% as a 5% benefit from our alloy steel acquisition, a 5% favorable foreign exchange translation and 50 basis points of price were partially offset by 4% lower volumes. Volume compression reflected the continued challenges in European industrial demand trends, which were partially offset by pockets of growth in Asia Pacific and in the Middle East. Adjusted EBIT decreased approximately 4% to $31,000,000. Margin compressed 100 basis points to 11.8% as the benefits of our alloy steel acquisition, effective cost management and a $3,000,000 of permanent savings were offset by the impact of lower volumes. We expect International Welding's margin performance to be in the mid 11 to mid 12% margin range in 2026. Moving to the Harris Products Group on slide eight. Fourth quarter sales increased 11% driven by 18% higher price and 170 basis points of favorable foreign exchange translation. As expected, volumes compressed 9% due to the decline in HVAC sector production activity in the quarter. Price continued to increase on metal costs and price actions taken to mitigate rising input costs. Adjusted EBIT increased 8% to $23,000,000 as margin declined 30 basis points on lower volumes and mix. The Harris segment is expected to operate in the 18 to 19% margin range in 2026. Moving to slide nine. We generated solid cash flows from operations in the quarter, aided by lower tax payments. Average operating working capital rose 100 basis points versus the comparable prior year period to 17.9%, primarily due to higher inventory levels and reflects top quartile performance compared to peers. Moving to slide 10. We continue to execute on our balanced capital allocation strategy, with high quartile returns. In quarter, we invested $44,000,000 in growth reflecting an acceleration in CapEx investments and $94,000,000 to shareholders. We generated an adjusted return on invested capital of 21.3%. Moving to slide 11 to discuss our operating assumptions for 2026. While conditions remain dynamic in many of our regions from ongoing trade negotiations and geopolitics, we are encouraged by recent OEM commentary on capital spending plans and growing infrastructure project commitments. This gives us cautious optimism that we may be in the early stages of an industrial sector recovery that would translate to broader demand momentum in our business in the second half of the year. While domestic distribution channel demand and consumer volumes have remained resilient, demand for our equipment and automation portfolios has been choppy. We will be looking for consumable volumes to inflect to consistent growth which is typically followed by an acceleration in capital spending after one to two quarters. Once we see those drivers, we are confident that our channel mix, diversified end markets, and portfolio solutions positions us well to capitalize on accelerating growth. Our full year 2026 operating framework assumes the sales growth rate in the mid single digit percent range with organic sales split fifty-fifty between volume and the 2025 price actions that carry over to 2026. We expect volume growth rates to improve starting in the second quarter and through year end. Price is expected to be strongest in the first quarter especially in the Americas Welding segment before largely anniversarying last year's price actions in the second quarter. Our price assumption does not include dynamic metal price adjustments in our Harris Products Group segment due to the volatility of metal markets. Our 2025 alloy steel acquisition is expected to provide an approximate seven basis point contribution to sales. These assumptions support our first quarter sales estimate that is similar to fourth quarter sales results. We will continue to pursue a neutral price-cost posture and expect a mid 20% incremental operating income margin from volume growth and enterprise initiatives, which will result in a modest improvement in our operating margin for the full year. In the first quarter, we expect a seasonal sequential increase of approximately $10,000,000 in incentive costs as we reset incentive targets and issue long-term incentives. This will impact margins and cash flow performance as we start the year. For the full year, we are confident in strong cash flow generation supports our capital allocation strategy and helps compound earnings performance through the cycle. We will continue to maintain an elevated level of capital spending with a target range of $110 to $130,000,000 as we invest across a range of safety, growth, and productivity-oriented projects to drive long-term value. Our expected tax rate and interest expense are generally in line with last year, at a low to mid 20% rate and in the range of $50 to $55,000,000 respectively. And now I'll pass the call back to Steve to cover our RISE strategy new 2030 targets. Thank you, Gabe. Turning to slide 13. Our next strategy builds upon the success of our Higher Standard strategy, which concluded in 2025.