Thanks, Neil, and hello, everyone. Starting off with Slide 6, I'd like to provide some more details on the Kepware and ThingWorx divestiture. The transaction is expected to close in the first half of calendar 2026, and our expected use of net after-tax proceeds will follow our overall capital allocation strategy of returning excess cash to shareholders while leaving room for any potential tuck-in acquisitions. We could receive up to $725 million in total cash consideration if certain thresholds are achieved. We expect either $565 million or $600 million upfront, depending on performance during the period up to close. The $125 million future potential earn-out is based on certain criteria related to a potential future transaction by the buyer. Assuming an April 1 close and a $565 million upfront payment, we would expect net upfront proceeds of approximately $365 million after working capital and indebtedness adjustments, divestiture-related fees and taxes related to the transaction. Turning to Slide 7. In fiscal '25, ARR attributable to Kepware and ThingWorx was approximately $160 million, and constant currency ARR growth was negative 1%. Including perpetual license and professional services revenue, the revenue contribution of Kepware and ThingWorx was approximately $200 million. We estimate that approximately $70 million of free cash flows was attributable to Kepware and ThingWorx in fiscal '25. For fiscal '26, we're providing constant currency ARR guidance for PTC, including and excluding Kepware and ThingWorx. ARR growth, excluding Kepware and ThingWorx, is expected to be 50 basis points higher. Also, for fiscal '26, we expect the Kepware and ThingWorx transaction will impact our as-reported free cash flow primarily due to onetime transaction-related items. To illustrate, I'll take you through a model on Slide 8. Starting at the top with our $1 billion of free cash flow guidance for fiscal '26, which assumes Kepware and ThingWorx are a part of PTC for the full fiscal year. Assuming the transaction closes on April 1, 2026, we would expect lower net cash inflows related to Kepware and ThingWorx in the second half of fiscal '26. However, we would expect this to be largely offset by a transaction services agreement, which begins upon close. If the transaction closes sooner than expected, there could be a modest impact to free cash flow. Related to the transaction, we expect to incur approximately $160 million of onetime cash outflows. Approximately $35 million of this relates to onetime divestiture-related fees and approximately $125 million relates to onetime cash taxes. We'll have more clarity on those items when the transaction closes, and we'll provide an update at that point. Remember, from an accounting perspective, the proceeds will show up in cash flow from investing, while taxes and divestiture-related costs will show up in operating cash flows. Assuming an April 1, 2026, close, this model shows that our as-reported free cash flow would be approximately $840 million in fiscal '26. You will have clear visibility to the onetime cash outflows in our reporting, and we will officially update our guidance post close. But as we think about fiscal '27, we expect to be building off the approximately $1 billion we are guiding to this year and we'll need to factor in up to $50 million of headwinds from the divestiture, which is the run rate of Kepware and ThingWorx cash flows, partially offset by TSA income, which we expect to continue. Moving to Slide 9 and a review of the results we just reported. As you know, we believe ARR and free cash flow are the most important metrics to assess the performance of our business. To help investors understand our business performance, excluding the impact of FX volatility, we provide ARR guidance and disclose our ARR results on a constant currency basis. At the end of Q4, our constant currency ARR using our fiscal '25 plan FX rates was $2.446 billion, up 8.5% year-over-year. And while I know that we consistently tell investors to focus on ARR and free cash flow rather than revenue and operating income. Given some of the dynamics in the quarter, I do think that it's prudent to talk a little bit about the revenue beat versus the midpoint of our guidance range for the quarter and put this in context with our ARR results. We came in at the midpoint of our guidance range for net new ARR in Q4. And as we discussed on our last call, the biggest variable between the high and low ends of the range was going to be deal structures. It certainly played out that way. In Q4, our teams did a great job, and we contracted a record amount of customer commitments. Many of these were in the form of ramp deals, many included commercial optimization levers, and several new and renewing contracts came in with longer-than-anticipated term length. In fact, our average term length in Q4 increased from approximately 2 years in Q4 of '24 to approximately 3 years in Q4 of '25. The way revenue accounting works for on-prem subscriptions under ASC 606, we record approximately 50% of the total contract value when the deal starts, and we recognize the rest ratably over the term. As was evident from our revenue guidance for Q4, we were expecting a healthy uptick in revenue, reflecting the mix of large multiyear renewals and large contracts in the pipeline. But what actually happened was that we beat the midpoint of our guidance range by $140 million and the high end by $110 million. So going back to ARR. You'll recall that ARR is the best approximation of annual billings related to recurring contracts because it's aligned with the amount that we invoice the customer on an annual basis. And as far as future contractual commitments, well, in the ARR way of thinking, that is recorded as deferred ARR. In the traditional P&L way of thinking, that shows up in RPO. And when we report our RPO in our 10-K, you'll see that it's up more than $550 million, both sequentially and on a year-over-year basis. But remember, not all of that turns into ARR or revenue in fiscal '26. There's additional deferred ARR in fiscal '27 and beyond as well. This should help explain why our revenue growth in the quarter significantly outpaced our ARR growth. All in all, it was a solid quarter with a lot of long-term positive impact that you don't see in our current ARR results or near-term outlook. The significant revenue beat is also what drove the significant EPS beat. On the cash flow side of things, we generated $100 million of free cash flow in Q4. For the full fiscal year, our free cash flow was $857 million, up 16%. Note that the free cash flow we generated in fiscal '25 absorbed approximately $20 million of outflows related to our go-to-market realignment. Our 16% free cash flow growth in fiscal '25 illustrates the operating leverage we benefit from as our ARR grows. Another way to illustrate our operating leverage is through our operating efficiency percentage, which expanded by 310 basis points to 45% in fiscal '25 compared to 42% in fiscal '24. You can see this in our illustrative cash flow model on Slide 23. Next, turning to Slide 10. Before I take you through our guidance, let me walk you through how we guide and report ARR. For fiscal '25, we provided constant currency ARR guidance and reported constant currency ARR results for all periods using our fiscal '25 planned FX rates, which were as of September 30, 2024. And for comparative purposes, at the same time last year, we also recast historical constant currency ARR amounts at our fiscal '25 planned FX rates. For fiscal '26, we're taking the exact same approach with historical results, recast using our fiscal '26 planned FX rates, which are as of September 30, 2025. For new investors who may not be familiar with our approach, please reach out to me or Matt and we'd be happy to do a deep dive. With that, I'll take you through our guidance on Slide 11. Because we don't know exactly when the Kepware and ThingWorx transaction will close, our guidance for fiscal '26 and Q1 '26 includes Kepware and ThingWorx for the full year. The exception is ARR, where we are additionally providing guidance that excludes Kepware and ThingWorx. All the ARR amounts on this slide are based on our fiscal '26 planned FX rates. For constant currency ARR, excluding Kepware and ThingWorx, we expect growth of approximately 7.5% to approximately 9.5% in fiscal '26. For constant currency ARR, including Kepware and ThingWorx, we expect growth of approximately 7% to 9%. Our ARR guidance is mindful of the efforts required to separate Kepware and ThingWorx as we push toward a closing expected in the first half of calendar 2026. From a linearity perspective, we're expecting similar quarterly seasonality as in fiscal '25 for net new ARR. This primarily has to do with the shape of the pipeline, linearity of churn and the linearity of deferred ARR, which is heavily skewed to Q4 in fiscal '26. Note that our cash flow guidance is not on a constant currency basis. And to be clear, our business is currently constituted, is on track to deliver approximately $1 billion of free cash flow in fiscal '26. We have a high degree of confidence in our guidance for free cash flow due to the predictability of our cash collections and the disciplined budgeting structure we have in place. Importantly, we've maintained consistent billing practices over time. We bill primarily upfront annually 1 year at a time, regardless of contract term lengths. So our free cash flow results over time are comparable. In fiscal '26, we expect similar invoicing seasonality compared to the previous 5 years. Based on this and our expected cash outflows we expect approximately 55% to 60% of our free cash flow to be generated in the first half of the year and for fiscal Q4 to be our lowest cash flow generation quarter. Some of you may have noticed that our guidance assumption for CapEx is stepping up by approximately $20 million in fiscal '26, which is also absorbed in our guidance for free cash flow. We view this as onetime in nature because it's related to moving a major R&D center to a new office. Although our focus is on ARR and free cash flow, we're providing revenue and EPS guidance to help you with your models. It's worth noting that our revenue guidance for fiscal '26 looks different from fiscal '25. We expect revenue to be up north of 10% in the first half, up in the mid-single digits in Q3 and to decline in Q4. This obviously reflects the dynamics I discussed earlier, with Q4 being down given the significant overperformance in Q4 of '25. Moving on to Slide 12. Here's an illustrative constant currency ARR model for fiscal '26. Focusing on PTC, including Kepware and ThingWorx, the column on the right illustrates the midpoint of net new ARR growth that corresponds to our fiscal '26 constant currency ARR guidance range of 7% to 9%. Consistent with my reminder from last quarter, we expect churn to remain low in fiscal '26 because our customers need to maintain subscriptions to our software to continue designing, producing and servicing their products. Turning to Slide 13. Here's a similar illustrative model for Q1 of '26 focusing on PTC, including Kepware and ThingWorx, the column on the right illustrates the dollar range of Q1 26% sequential net new ARR growth that corresponds to our Q1 '26 constant currency ARR guidance range of 8% to 8.5%. As a reminder, Q1 is typically our lightest net new ARR quarter given normal renewal seasonality and the timing of larger enterprise transactions. As I mentioned earlier, we expect similar linearity for net new ARR in fiscal '26 compared to fiscal '25. What's important, however, is what Neil mentioned earlier, that our demand capture remains healthy in a challenging macro environment, and we're entering the year with a stronger pipeline than when we started fiscal '25 and a solid deferred ARR balance which is heavily skewed to Q4. As you know, our net new ARR can be somewhat volatile in any given quarter, given dynamics such as new or renewal bookings seasonality, timing of deferred ARR, starting how much of our new bookings in any given quarter starts in the quarter, how much churn we expect in any quarter, et cetera? All of that said, we feel good about the state of the business, the focus on the Intelligent Product Lifecycle and its relevance to our customers as evidenced by our pipeline. We have many initiatives underway to capture the opportunity to drive net new ARR growth in the future. With that, I'd like to turn the call back over to the operator for the Q&A session.