Thank you, Matthijs. Our third quarter 2025 non-GAAP adjusted gross profit was $115 million or 46.5% adjusted gross margin compared to $113 million or 46.2% adjusted gross margin in 2024. Adjusted gross margins were up 30 basis points year-over-year and up 40 basis points sequentially, which was better than our expectations, notwithstanding the increased cost of tariffs. As we stand here today, the cost of tariffs in our supply chain and the impact on gross margins has now been fully mitigated. For the third quarter, R&D expenses were $24 million and approximately 10% of sales. SG&A expenses, excluding certain adjustments, were $44 million or 18% of sales. Non-GAAP adjustments included restructuring costs, ERP design costs and legal costs related to the insurance recovery claim. Adjusted EBITDA was $58 million in the third quarter, a 23% adjusted EBITDA margin, demonstrating growth of 2% year-over-year and 11% sequentially. On the tax front, our non-GAAP tax rate for the third quarter was 24% versus 21% in the prior year. Our tax rate increased year-over-year mainly due to changes in jurisdictional mix of pretax income. Our non-GAAP adjusted earnings per share was $0.87 in the quarter, up 2% versus the prior year and up 14% sequentially. Operating cash flows in the third quarter was $8 million compared to $23 million in the prior year. This was below our expectations, but is driven by temporary factors. After successfully settling on a German tax audit, we paid more than $5 million in the prior period cash tax payments in the quarter, and this amount is up to $15 million year-over-year on a year-to-date basis. In addition, we have incurred roughly $15 million of restructuring and acquisition-related costs year-to-date with a significant portion paying out in the third quarter. And finally, we had higher-than-expected inventory purchases to accelerate the ramp of manufacturing in our regional manufacturing centers. We believe these decisions better position the company in the fourth quarter and the full year 2026 to be more resilient and deliver stronger cash flows, and we expect to recover back to our normal levels of greater than 100% conversion to net income. We ended the third quarter with gross debt of $457 million with a gross leverage ratio of 2.2x and a net debt of $368 million, giving us a net leverage ratio of approximately 1.7x. In the quarter, we purchased $14 million worth of company stock opportunistically and nearly $20 million of shares have been repurchased year-to-date. As we've recently announced, the Board of Directors has authorized an additional $200 million of capacity in our share buyback program. While acquisitions remain our top capital allocation priority, we will repurchase shares whenever the value of the stock gives us a cash return greater than our internal investments or acquisition investments. Now I'll share some additional performance metrics and details of our operating segments. Novanta bookings increased 17% year-over-year and 4% sequentially with a book-to-bill of 1.03, indicating a stronger backlog and positive outlook. New product sales grew nearly 60% year-over-year, raising the Vitality Index to 23%. Design win activity remains strong with company-wide design wins up 20% year-over-year with more than 50% higher on a year-to-date basis. In the third quarter, Automation Enabling Technologies segment revenue declined 3% year-over-year, in line with expectations. The book-to-bill in this segment was 0.96. However, bookings were up 15% year-over-year. Our Precision Manufacturing business, which serves the industrial equipment market, saw a year-over-year revenue decline of 7% in the quarter. However, this business saw sequential growth of 3% and double-digit growth in both bookings and design wins, demonstrating building momentum. In our Robotics and Automation business, revenue was roughly flat year-over-year and grew 3% sequentially. This was also in line with our expectations. We continue to see solid outlook in this business with resiliency in demand for advanced robotic applications and strength in short-cycle semiconductor applications tied to data center investments supporting AI. For the Automation Enabling Technologies segment, adjusted gross margins were above 48%, approximately flat year-over-year, driven by factory productivity and favorable product mix. In addition, we fully offset the cost of tariffs and temporary redundancies and overhead costs as we execute on our regional manufacturing plans. New product revenue for the segment nearly doubled year-over-year and customer design wins grew 30% on the back of both our innovation and stronger commercial executions by our teams. In addition, the Vitality Index was in the high teens percent of sales, up double from where it was last year. Moving to the Medical Solutions segment. Revenue in this segment was up 6% year-over-year. This segment saw a book-to-bill of 1.1 in the third quarter, and bookings were up 19% year-over-year and up 14% sequentially on the back of record new product launches. New product sales in the quarter grew by over 40% year-over-year, and the Vitality Index in this segment was nearly 30% of sales. Our Advanced Surgery business experienced 17% growth year-over-year, driven by both strong patient procedural growth rates in health care on a global basis and from the launch of our second-generation insufflators, which have received overwhelming market acceptance and adoption. These growth dynamics are expected to continue into the fourth quarter and well into 2026 and beyond. In our Precision Medicine business, which serves the life science and multiomics markets, sales declined 4% year-over-year, but grew sequentially by 3%. This business is expected to continue to improve sequentially in subsequent quarters as we work through some of the challenging end market dynamics. In the Medical Solutions segment, advanced gross margins -- adjusted gross margins were approximately 45% in the quarter, better than expected, which represented margin expansion of 70 basis points year-over-year and 130 basis points sequentially. This solid margin expansion comes from both factory productivity initiatives and from improving scale from our in-house medical consumables manufacturing facility. Finally, our efforts to mitigate the cost of tariffs on our supply chain and the impact on gross margins were successful and are now offsetting any incremental costs. In addition, our regional manufacturing initiative is on track and is being well received by customers. As a reminder, this initiative helps our customers avoid the increased cost of tariffs by manufacturing their demand in the regions in which they sell their products. The 11% sequential revenue growth in China, along with 17% growth in bookings, 60% growth in new product sales, 20% growth in design wins, all demonstrate the progress we have made here, not only for Novanta, but for our customers. Overall, across all regions, we see gradual improvement in investment sentiment in the capital equipment demand as OEMs and end users adjust to trade policy dynamics. Nevertheless, while this market momentum continues to build, we continue to prudently manage the company's profitability, including following through on our cost reduction plans, which we announced earlier this year. These plans are on track, and we are seeing some savings this year with full savings run rating into 2026. Now turning to guidance. Novanta is committed to delivering sequential revenue and profit growth driven by our innovation pipeline and our strong customer demand in our end markets. We are seeing improving momentum as evident by our revenue and bookings growth by the strong design win activity and our successful new product launches. As such, we now expect fourth quarter 2025 GAAP revenue to be in the range of $253 million to $257 million, which represents year-over-year organic revenue growth of 3% and reported revenue growth of 6% to 8%. This guidance in the fourth quarter is in line with the current Wall Street consensus, and we are confident in this outlook. As a result, for the full year 2025, we now expect GAAP revenue to be approximately $975 million to $979 million, which represents roughly flat organic growth for the full year and 3% reported revenue growth. At the segment level, in the fourth quarter, we expect Automation Enabling Technologies to grow 1% year-over-year and up 3% sequentially. Our Medical Solutions segment is expected to demonstrate up to 15% reported growth in the fourth quarter, which includes up to 11% organic growth year-over-year and sequential growth of 4%. This growth will come from continued strength in Advanced Surgery at growth rates comparable to the third quarter and from a sequentially improving Precision Medicine business. For adjusted gross margins, we expect to achieve approximately 46% in both the fourth quarter and the full year. Excluding the cost of our regional manufacturing initiative, we should be on track to achieving our goal of 100 basis points of gross margin expansion this year. We expect R&D and SG&A expenses in the fourth quarter to be approximately $69 million to $70 million and for the full year to be $276 million to $277 million. This represents roughly 28% of sales. This guidance excludes expected costs associated with the design and planning phase of the standard ERP system, which will be deployed over the next few years and further supports our footprint consolidation and regional manufacturing initiatives. Depreciation expense, which was approximately $4 million in the third quarter, will be similar in the fourth quarter and will be approximately $16 million in the full year. Stock compensation expense, which was below $7 million in the third quarter due to onetime adjustments to certain long-term equity grants will be approximately $11 million in the fourth quarter. And so for the full year would be roughly $33 million. For adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter, we expect a range of $62 million to $65 million, which represents 18% to 24% growth year-over-year. For the full year of 2025, we expect EBITDA to be $222 million to $225 million or approximately a 23% EBITDA margin. Interest expense, which was $6 million in the third quarter will be similar in the fourth quarter and expected to be roughly $24 million for the full year of 2025, excluding any material changes in debt balances. We expect our non-GAAP tax rate to be around 22% in the fourth quarter and for the full year. Diluted weighted average shares outstanding will be approximately 36 million shares. For the fourth quarter, we expect diluted earnings per share to be in the range of $0.87 to $0.93, growing 14% to 22% year-over-year. For the full year 2025, we expect adjusted diluted earnings per share to be $3.24 and $3.30. Cash flow conversion in the fourth quarter should improve versus the past few quarters as we stabilize our inventory levels as we move beyond some of the large timing-related payments made in the third quarter. For the full year, we expect to achieve a goal of hitting cash conversion of greater than 100% of GAAP net income. Overall, our latest full year guidance is in line with current Wall Street consensus. And looking ahead to 2026, based on our view of the sequentially improving demand environment, we expect to achieve a baseline of mid-single-digit organic growth for the full year. Of course, in early 2026, we will give you another update with additional details. But given the momentum, we wanted to share our initial views now. And finally, with a strong balance sheet and robust pipeline, we are well positioned to accelerate our acquisition strategy. In summary, we remain confident in our long-term strategy and business model. We see growing momentum, which will help us return to organic growth in the fourth quarter and maintain our organic growth trajectory into next year. We are excited about our new customer wins, the success of our new product launches, and we continue to make strong progress in high-growth markets, particularly in medical technology markets and physical AI robotic markets. We remain focused on executing with excellence in our strategy and our top priorities no matter what the market environment brings. This concludes our prepared remarks. We'll now open the call up for questions.