Thank you, Justin, and welcome to everyone joining us today. Before turning to the fourth quarter, I'd like to echo Justin's comments on some of our accomplishments from 2025. We completed the sale of our self-service business, further simplifying the portfolio and sharpening our focus on core assets. We delivered strong free cash flow in what remained a challenging market environment, and we continue to aggressively reduce costs through restructuring and productivity initiatives to better align our cost structure with demand. In Europe, these actions improved the efficiency of our logistics footprint and reduced facilities and overhead costs. In North America, we focused on rationalizing overhead to more efficiently serve our customer base. Turning to fourth quarter results for continuing operations. We reported revenues of $3.3 billion, up 2.7% year-over-year. Diluted earnings per share were $0.29, which includes a $52 million or approximately $0.20 per share goodwill impairment related to our specialty business. On an adjusted basis, diluted EPS was $0.59 compared to $0.78 in the prior year on a comparable basis. It's worth highlighting that the prior year included a $0.10 per share benefit from a nonrecurring legal settlement in North America. Our balanced capital allocation strategy contributed positively to earnings with share repurchases and interest expense each adding $0.01 and favorable FX and tax rates contributing an additional $0.02 each. These benefits were more than offset by organic revenue declines and lower EBITDA in North America and Europe. For the full year, diluted EPS was $2.31 and adjusted diluted EPS was $3.01, at the lower end of the range we guided to in October. Free cash flow in the quarter was $274 million, bringing full year free cash flow to $847 million, exceeding our expectations and driven primarily by trade working capital initiatives. We returned $116 million to shareholders during the quarter through share repurchases and dividends. In North America, top line performance remained solid despite headwinds from repairable claims and tariffs, and we believe we continue to gain share. That said, pricing remains competitive and our ability to fully pass through higher costs while maintaining margins continues to be constrained. Segment EBITDA margin was 12.7%, down 380 basis points year-over-year. Gross margin accounted for approximately 140 basis points of the decline, driven by tariff pass-through dynamics and customer mix. Overhead leverage accounted for approximately 260 basis points, primarily reflecting the impact from the prior year nonrecurring favorable legal settlement that I mentioned earlier. Importantly, our ongoing productivity and restructuring actions continue to support cost discipline in the current demand environment. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect EBITDA margins to be slightly down from 2025 as we annualize the impact from tariffs. In Europe, revenue pressure weighed on margins and segment EBITDA margin declined 180 basis points to 8.3%. Gross margin declined approximately 160 basis points due to heightened price competition and higher input costs. While lower volumes pressured overhead leverage, productivity and restructuring initiatives helped offset this impact, positioning the business well when market conditions normalize. Our expectation is that Europe will get back to near double-digit EBITDA in 2026 with aggressive execution on our strategic initiatives and further cost actions. Specialty delivered an EBITDA margin of 4.5%, approximately 40 basis points better than last year. While mix weighed modestly on gross margin, strong cost control drove favorable overhead leverage. With 2 consecutive quarters of organic growth, we believe Specialty is well positioned as its end markets continue to recover. Turning to the balance sheet. We paid down more than $500 million of debt in the fourth quarter following the self-service divestiture and strong free cash flow generation. With the help of our lending group, we also extended the maturity of our revolver to December 2030 and our Canadian term loan to March 2029, improving our maturity profile while preserving the liquidity and flexibility. At year-end, total debt was $3.7 billion with leverage at 2.4x EBITDA, down sequentially. We remain committed to maintaining a strong balance sheet and our investment-grade rating. Our effective interest rate was 5.0%, slightly lower than the prior quarter. In total, we returned $469 million to shareholders in 2025, 55% of free cash flow, exceeding the capital return commitment we outlined in our 2024 Investor Day. Turning to guidance for 2026. Our outlook reflects current market conditions and recent trends and assumes tariffs in effect as of February 1. Importantly, we believe it is prudent to not reflect a meaningful market recovery in our guidance until we begin to see sustained improvements in underlying volumes. As a result, our assumptions remain intentionally conservative. While we are cautious on demand, our confidence in the outlook is grounded in execution, particularly the actions we are taking on costs, productivity and capital allocation, which are largely within our control. That said, we are encouraged by several early indicators that could support improved demand over time, including easing insurance premium pressures, improved consumer confidence in automotive and continued stabilization and improvement in used car prices. While these trends are not yet reflected in our guidance, we believe they represent positive developments for LKQ as volumes recover. We expect organic parts and services revenue growth between negative 0.5% and a positive 1.5%. North America is expected to be slightly positive. Europe remains challenged and is expected to be slightly negative, and Specialty is expected to grow closer to mid-single digits. Adjusted diluted EPS is expected to be in the range of $2.90 to $3.20. We remain focused on offsetting volume and inflationary pressures through productivity initiatives, additional restructuring actions and disciplined capital allocation. As part of our continued focus on execution and discipline, we recently approved a restructuring plan designed to better position our cost structure to more efficiently serve our strategic markets and support improved performance over time. This plan is expected to result in costs of approximately $60 million to $70 million in 2026 and supports our broader strategic transformation objectives, including sharpening our go-to-market approach, rationalizing our logistics footprint and further consolidating back-office functions. We expect these actions will generate more than $50 million in annualized cost savings with over half to be realized in 2026. Free cash flow is expected to be between $700 million and $850 million. The midpoint reflects more normalized working capital expectations compared to 2025, while maintaining disciplined capital spending. As in prior years, we expect the first quarter to be a use of cash, followed by positive cash generation throughout the remainder of the year. Thank you for your time. And with that, I will turn the call back to Justin for his closing remarks.