Thank you, Tom, and good morning, everyone. I'll start on Slide 8. As Tom mentioned, we had strong financial performance across the business in the first quarter and the Priority commerce engine continues to generate high growth in our higher margin operating segments. I'll go into more detail in the segment results, but B2B revenue grew over 12% and enterprise revenue grew over 22% on a year-over-year basis for the quarter. That growth has resulted in adjusted gross profit from our B2B and enterprise segments, now representing 62% of our total. The growth in those higher margin segments also allowed for overall margin expansion as adjusted gross profit margins improved by over 170 basis points from Q1 2024. The continued shift in our business mix also contributes to the highly visible and recurring nature of our business model as nearly 62% of adjusted gross profit in Q1 came from recurring revenues that are not dependent on transaction counts or card volumes. Moving now to the segment level results and starting with the SMB segment on Slide 9, SMB generated Q1 revenue of $151.7 million, which is $7.7 million or 5.3% higher than last year. Day count for the quarter compared to last year had an approximate 2% drag on the growth rate. SMB's revenue growth was a combination of strong 10% growth in the core portfolio, partially offset by the continued attrition of historical residual portfolio purchases, along with risk pairing and specialized acquiring in advance of certain network program management changes being implemented that we believe will benefit us in the future. Total card volume was $17.7 billion for the quarter, which is up 3.4% from the prior year. Again, day count also had an impact on volume growth, giving fewer processing days in Q1 of 2025. From a merchant standpoint, we averaged approximately 178,000 accounts during the quarter, up modestly from 177,000 in Q1 of 2024, while new monthly boards averaged 4,100 during the quarter compared to 4,300 in Q1 of last year and 3,700 in Q4. Adjusted gross profit in SMB for the first quarter was $33.1 million, which is 3.9% higher than last year's first quarter. Gross margins of 21.8% in the quarter are down 30 basis points from last year, but sequentially increased almost 130 basis points from Q4 as we recovered certain credit losses during the quarter that were charged off in early 2024. On a year-over-year basis, margins were impacted by the combination of reseller mix, lower specialized acquiring revenue, and the attrition of historical residual portfolio purchases. Lastly for SMB, adjusted EBITDA was $25.7 million, which is up 2.7% from last year. Adjusted EBITDA growth lagged adjusted gross profit growth in the quarter because of increased salary and benefits, along with higher software expenses related to the previously discussed migration to the public cloud, which will convert certain CapEx to OpEx, but provide longer-term benefits to the company. Moving to B2B, revenue of $23.9 million was an increase of 12.1%, or $2.6 million from the prior year. Our buyer-funded revenues grew by 7.1%, while supplier-funded revenues grew by 35% on a year-over-year basis. To clarify, when we use the terms buyer-funded and supplier-funded, we're referring to who is paying the interchange or credit card-related fees. In the supplier-funded model, or what we've historically referred to as CPX, the supplier accepted card payment net of the interchange discount because they want to receive the payment faster while receiving the funds electronically with reconciliation back into their GL and without the cost of handling paper checks. In the buyer-funded model, which came by the plastic acquisition, the buyer pays the card fee because they want to utilize existing credit card capacity to extend their payables terms and optimize their working capital while generating cash back or rewards points for using their card. The buyer-funded businesses increased focus on enterprise-level customers and large bank referral partners showed success in the quarter as companies seek to optimize their working capital and streamline their payables operations in the face of rising input costs, whether resulting from general inflation or from increased tariff rates. Adjusted gross profit in B2B increased to $7.3 million in the quarter, which is a 17.8% increase over the prior year. For the quarter, gross margins were 30.5%, or 150 basis points higher, compared to 29% in the first quarter of 2024. The B2B segment produced $3.5 million of adjusted EBITDA during the quarter, which was a $1.8 million, or 101% increase over the comparable period in 2024. The acceleration of adjusted EBITDA growth compared to adjusted gross profit was driven by strong operating leverage in the segment, including a 14% reduction in operating expenses on a year-over-year basis. Moving to the enterprise segment, Q1 revenue of $50.1 million was an increase of $9.1 million, or 22.2% from the prior year. Revenue growth was driven by continued strong enrollment trends and an increase in the number of billed clients in CFTPay, combined with an increase in the number of integrated partners and organic same-store sales growth with those existing partners. Higher account balances in CFTPay and Passport were able to largely offset the impact of lower interest rates in the quarter. As a result of those factors, adjusted gross profit for the enterprise segment also increased by 22.2% to $46.9 million, while adjusted gross profit margins remained at 93.6%. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $42.4 million, an increase of $7.7 million, or 22.2% from the prior year's first quarter. Overall profitability in enterprise was driven by continued strong performance in CFTPay, which offset investments made in newer verticals that we believe will provide the next lag of the growth stool for the enterprise segment. Moving to consolidated operating expenses, salaries and benefits of $25.8 million increased by $3.6 million, or 16.4% compared to Q1 of last year, and SG&A of $15.1 million increased by $4.1 million from Q1 of 2024. Higher SG&A expenses were driven by increased spend on software, including the continued public cloud migration, higher marketing expenses in the quarter, and certain nonrecurring legal and other expenses, including those related to the secondary equity offering we closed in January. Moving to the capital structure and liquidity overview, debt levels during the quarter declined to $935.5 million, following a $10 million prepayment of a term loan during the quarter. We ended the quarter with $117.6 million of available liquidity, including all $70 million of borrowing capacity available under our revolving credit facility, and $47.6 million of unrestricted cash on the balance sheet. For the LTM period, ended March 31st, adjusted EBITDA of $209.2 million represents $4.9 million of sequential quarterly growth from $204.3 million at the end of Q4. This growth in adjusted EBITDA combined with net debt of $887.9 million resulted in net leverage of $4.2 times at quarter end, which is down from $4.3 times at 2024's year end. As mentioned on our last earnings call, we will continue to focus on opportunities to reduce leverage on our balance sheet, while also remaining nimble in the face of inorganic growth opportunities in this market. If you were to use the midpoint of our 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance, we would be under four times leverage by year end based on today's net debt balance. This is the first quarter since I joined Priority where this page doesn't include mention of the preferred stock dividend. With the redemption in full of the preferred stock in 2024, I'm happy to report that all of our net income now flows to the benefit of our common shareholders, which resulted in adjusted EPS of $0.22 for the quarter. That compares to $0.18 in Q4 2024 and $0.03 in Q1 of last year. As Tom mentioned, based on our Q1 results and our forecast for the remainder of the year, we are maintaining the full year financial guidance that was provided on our Q4 2024 earnings call. This outlook is informed by the current environment where consumer spending remains stable and interest rate changes remain aligned with current market forecasts. If you compare Q1 results to the full year guidance, the simple math will show that we're not 25% of the way there yet, but our expectation is and has been that we will grow revenue and profits sequentially each quarter as we move through the year. Before I turn the call back over to Tom, I wanted to provide an update on our progress in the remediation of the material weakness related to the design and operating deficiencies in certain automated controls around ingestion and validation of third-party processors data. As noted in our 10-K and comments on our last earnings call, the material weakness did not result in a restatement or any change to our consolidated financial results. The Board of Directors and management team are actively working to remediate the automated controls deficiency. As of today, the team has made substantial progress in those efforts, and we are testing the existing data translation controls in a non-production environment. Once we are certain those controls meet our internal standards and those of our external auditors, we will move them into a production environment for formal certification. To be clear, though, the material weakness will remain intact until we complete our fiscal 2025 audit process and receive a formal opinion from our external auditor. With that, I'll now turn the call back over to Tom for his closing comments.