Thanks, Ed. As you just heard, we are exiting fiscal 2025 with a clear framework for fiscal 2026. This afternoon, I will focus my commentary on three areas. First, I'll review our fourth quarter results and will discuss revenue using the historical deposits and identity categories. Then I will review our full year performance using the new fraud and identity and check verification reporting structure. And then finally, I'll walk through our fiscal 2026 outlook and how it supports the pillars Ed laid out. Starting with fourth quarter results. Total Q4 revenue was $44.8 million, up 4% year-over-year, with SaaS revenue growth of 19% being a highlight. Revenue results exceeded the midpoint of our guidance range by roughly $4 million as several large deposit deals closed sooner than forecast from higher transactional volumes, and we saw stronger-than-expected identity transaction volumes. Identity revenue was $21 million, up 7% year-over-year, driven by 14% SaaS growth from continued transactional volume overages and deposits revenue was $23.8 million, up 1% year-over-year, driven by growth in CFD SaaS revenue. Q4 non-GAAP gross margin was 84%, down approximately 200 basis points year-over-year, driven by higher investment in SaaS services delivery. Q4 non-GAAP operating expense was just under $25 million, improving 5% sequentially from Q3, driven by lower external services spending and the timing of marketing events. On a year-over-year basis, Q4 non-GAAP operating expense increased by approximately $3 million, normalizing for a reduction in bonus accruals and a reversal of doubtful accounts in the prior year, underlying operating expense was essentially flat. Tying this all together, adjusted EBITDA was $12.9 million in the quarter or a 28.7% margin. After other income, interest and tax, non-GAAP net income came in at $11.1 million or $0.24 per diluted share on 47.3 million shares. As Ed mentioned earlier, we have updated our external reporting. Under the new structure, deposits maps to check verification, Identity maps to fraud and identity and Check Fraud Defender has moved from deposits to fraud and identity. We are also simplifying our revenue categories. Going forward, the primary change will be the combination of license and maintenance into a single line to better reflect how customers contract and pay for those items. The 10-K provides results in both the prior disaggregated format and the new reporting format, allowing investors to compare historical performance across the two presentations. With that framing, I will now walk through full year 2025 performance. Starting with Fraud and Identity for fiscal year 2025, Fraud and Identity revenue was $90 million, up 15% year-over-year with growth led by our SaaS offerings, primarily driven by continued volume expansion in our core customer base. What stands out this year is how consistent customer behavior has become across regions and customer tiers. Large banks and enterprise customers are converging on the same pattern, shifting identity earlier in the onboarding flow, consolidating fraud and identity workflows and standardizing on bundled stacks rather than fragmented point solutions. Taken together, fraud and identity is now operating at increased scale and more durable economics, positioning us well for continued growth in fiscal 2026. Turning to check verification, comprised of our Mobile Deposit and Check Intelligence products. This portfolio remains an important cash flow generator for the company. Check verification revenue for fiscal 2025 was $90 million compared with $94 million in fiscal 2024, a variance mostly related to deal timing year-over-year. This year's performance reflects the resiliency of a portfolio that has operated in a relatively defined annual revenue range for several years despite overall check volume declines in the U.S. and the digestion effects of an unusually large revenue recognition event in fiscal 2023 from a single large channel partner when we recognized roughly four years' worth of revenue in a single quarter. On a consolidated basis, total revenue for fiscal 2025 was about $180 million, split evenly between fraud and identity and check verification. Our 4% consolidated revenue growth breaks down cleanly as follows: SaaS, which grew 21% year-over-year, contributed roughly 8 points of growth. Licensed software and support reduced growth by roughly 4 points as expected, reflecting the ongoing overall mix shift from software term licenses to recurring SaaS. For the full year, non-GAAP gross margin was about 85% compared with about 86% in fiscal 2024. The modest step down is consistent with our transition to a heavier SaaS and services mix. SaaS and services carry blended margins in the mid-70s percent range versus nearly 100% for licensed software. As is typical with a mix shift towards SaaS, the margin rate compresses slightly, but absolute gross profit dollars continue to grow. Importantly, automation and richer identity fraud journeys are lifting gross profit per journey, which offsets some of the mix impact and supports long-term scale. Non-GAAP operating expense for fiscal 2025 was $100.9 million, improving 2% from last year and an improvement in operating expense intensity from 60% to 56% of revenue. Breaking that down in G&A, vendor consolidation and tighter procurement reduced external spending, bringing G&A intensity down from 20% of revenue to 18%. We also streamlined finance and accounting processes, which lowered our reliance on external advisers. Sales and marketing intensity improved from almost 22% to under 21%, driven by stronger alignment between marketing programs and pipeline generation and a shift away from higher cost event-driven activity toward digital and partner-led demand generation. R&D intensity improved from 18% to 17% of revenue as we completed several platform consolidation initiatives, reduced reliance on higher cost contractors and increased engineering productivity through automation and broader adoption of AI-assisted development tools. Adjusted EBITDA for fiscal 2025 grew by 15% to $54 million, representing a margin of 30%, up from 27% a year ago. Non-GAAP net income for fiscal 2025 was $45 million and roughly flat with fiscal 2024, even though adjusted EBITDA increased by 15%. This result was driven primarily by a higher non-GAAP tax rate, 21% in fiscal 2025 compared to 9% in fiscal 2024. The increase reflects higher pretax income across jurisdictions and lower tax deductions from stock-based compensation and other payroll-related items. Free cash flow for the full year was $54 million, which equates to 100% conversion of adjusted EBITDA compared with just under 65% last year. While operational discipline and lower non-GAAP cash adjustments contributed, this conversion level is above what we consider a longer-term steady state, and it's important to highlight a couple of nonstructural tailwinds that will dissipate over time. First, following the expected payoff of our 75 basis points convertible debt on February 1, 2026, we will no longer receive the interest arbitrage benefit. Second, there is an initial working capital step change benefit as revenue mix changes, which should be followed by an ongoing but smaller growth linked benefit as SaaS base expands. And third, by 2028, we will have exhausted the benefits associated with the catch-up provisions within the recent tax legislation, which will lower the cash tax rate during fiscal year 2026 and fiscal year 2027. Taking these items into consideration, over the longer term, we believe a more realistic steady state is around 75% conversion, which we believe is consistent with recurring revenue software peers. Our approach to capital allocation remains consistent and disciplined. We first fund high-return initiatives in the business while ensuring the balance sheet remains resilient, balanced with returning excess capital to shareholders. We ended the year with about $196 million of cash and investments and approximately $157 million of total debt, resulting in $40 million net cash position. Combined with our committed term loan and revolving credit facilities, this provides full flexibility to retire the $155 million of convertible debt maturing in early calendar 2026 while preserving ample liquidity to fund product development and enable additional share repurchases. Regarding share repurchases, in fiscal 2025, we repurchased approximately $5 million of shares. And since fiscal year-end through December 10, we have repurchased an additional $7.7 million, leaving $13.6 million remaining in the current authorization to execute through May 2026. Let me now turn to our fiscal 2026 outlook. We expect fiscal 2026 revenue of $185 million to $195 million, implying roughly 6% at the midpoint. This range reflects the balance of stable check verification and accelerating fraud and identity demand. With the first quarter nearly complete, Q1 revenue is tracking to between $41 million and $44 million. We expect fiscal 2026 to be slightly more back half weighted, reflecting a gradual ramp in fraud and identity SaaS. We expect fraud and identity product portfolio revenue of $101 million to $105 million in fiscal 2026, which would represent approximately 15% growth at the midpoint and would maintain the same growth rate we delivered in fiscal 2025. We expect modest gross margin pressure in fiscal 2026, largely due to mix shift towards SaaS and services as we invest ahead of expected demand growth. We still expect gross profit dollars to continue to rise despite this compression, assuming the midpoint of the revenue guidance range. On operating expenses, we expect to increase R&D intensity as we accelerate development. This investment will be funded by continued leverage in G&A and by lower sales and marketing intensity as we unify our go-to-market teams, automate more of the cycle and improve sales operations and analytics. Taken together, these offsets allow us to maintain or improve overall operating expense intensity versus fiscal 2025, even as we invest behind our product road map. We expect fiscal 2026 adjusted EBITDA margins in the 27% to 30% range. At the midpoint, this implies adjusted EBITDA dollars remaining roughly flat year-over-year, reflecting deliberate reinvestment rather than a step back in earnings power. We believe that rising demand for fraud and identity solutions and strong unit economics makes this a good place -- a good balance between delivering profitability and deploying capital into high-return R&D and go-to-market initiatives. We also expect adjusted EBITDA to continue converting to free cash flow at attractive rates during fiscal 2026 with normalization towards our long-term target over time. Regarding taxes, we expect fiscal 2026 non-GAAP tax expense, which reflects cash taxes to decline meaningfully from fiscal 2025. This change is driven by changes in U.S. tax legislation, particularly the revised treatment of capitalized R&D. As a result, we expect a fiscal 2026 non-GAAP tax rate of roughly 10% of non-GAAP pretax income. Before we turn to Q&A, I want to highlight an important milestone. Over the last several quarters, we've said we would finish the cleanup of material weaknesses in our internal controls. As disclosed in our filings today, we have now fully remediated all previously reported material weaknesses. This outcome reflects multiyear investment in people, systems and technology to strengthen our processes and control environment. This is a significant accomplishment and a meaningful step forward for the company. We want to thank our teams across the organization and particularly our accounting team for their discipline, commitment and very hard work throughout the process. Finally, our updated investor presentation and the Q4 and full year supplemental financial package are available on our Investor Relations website, including trended historical data for our new product categories and revenue classification. With that, operator, we are ready to take questions.