Thank you, and welcome to our fourth quarter earnings conference call. We closed 2025 with a strong fourth quarter, delivering steady results through what's typically a seasonally soft period. Our teams remain highly disciplined with strong operational execution in the field and a focus on cost controls. We are pleased with the performance across all our businesses during 2025, particularly given the challenging commodity environment we faced throughout the year. Patterson-UTI once again demonstrated its ability to generate strong free cash flow, delivering $416 million in adjusted free cash flow in 2025. Notably, the fourth quarter marked our highest adjusted free cash flow quarter since we completed our strategic transformation in 2023. This achievement highlights our ability to adapt to changing market conditions and underscores the effectiveness of our teams in maximizing our potential throughout all phases in the cycle. We are showing greater resilience to market fluctuations as we use our technology edge to deliver operational excellence. I'd like to extend my sincere appreciation to all our employees for their hard work and dedication throughout 2025. Your efforts were instrumental in our success, and we look forward to moving Patterson-UTI forward again in 2026. The industry overcame numerous challenges in 2025, including an increase in OPEC+ supply and ongoing macroeconomic uncertainties. Despite these pressures, the oil market has remained resilient with crude prices today at a similar level to those on our last quarterly earnings call. Although commodity prices remain unpredictable, in any scenario, at Patterson-UTI, we will remain committed to our core principles: delivering safe and efficient execution for our customers, investing capital responsibly in differentiated technologies and maximizing returns while generating substantial adjusted free cash flow for our investors. Our free cash flow profile continues to be robust, which gives us confidence to increase our quarterly dividend by 25% to $0.10 per share in the first quarter. We are confident that our free cash flow will exceed our dividend commitments, providing the opportunity for additional share repurchases or other investments aimed at creating further shareholder value. From a macro perspective, uncertainties remain regarding the sustainability of U.S. oil production at the current pace of activity. Recent data suggests that reduced drilling and completion programs in 2025 are beginning to impact production figures. The industry is likely approaching a point where we'll need to decide between declining production volumes or increased drilling activity to maintain production trends. Although there may be a moderate decrease in U.S. oil activity in the near term, we do not believe that the industry can continue operating at lower drilling levels without causing a more significant impact to production than what has been seen so far. We remain optimistic about the long-term prospects for natural gas, and we anticipate that a multiyear increase in drilling and completion activity will be needed to meet future demand. While there have been some incremental increases in natural gas-focused activity and natural gas prices have rebounded sharply due to winter weather demand, we expect most large customers will wait for clear commodity price signals after peak winter demand before making changes to their plans. As physical demand for natural gas for both LNG and power generation grows, we expect to see additional demand for our services in the second half of 2026. In response to the macro environment, we have reduced our gross CapEx budget by around 15% to roughly $500 million in 2026. After accounting for the expected proceeds from a typical cadence of asset sales during 2026, we continue to expect that our CapEx net of asset sales will be below $500 million this year. We have made significant progress in lowering our unit level maintenance CapEx requirements. We continue to successfully implement new digital processes that improve preventive maintenance, high grade our asset base with new technologies and consolidate facilities as we move further through the integration process of our businesses. Importantly, our 2026 CapEx budget reflects funding for high-return projects that will further enhance the quality of our operations and ensure we are well positioned with new technology that supports the next leg of customer demand. While we are substantially reducing our overall CapEx budget, we fully expect to exit 2026 with a more advanced and higher-quality asset base than at the start of the year. During the fourth quarter, our U.S. Contract Drilling Business saw a relatively steady activity and pricing compared to late third quarter levels, and this stability continued into 2026. Our focus remains on identifying investing in assets and technologies that bifurcate drilling performance and create unique value for both our customers and investors. Of note, we have seen increasing acceptance of performance-based commercial agreements, and this shift reflects growing customer interest in partnering with service providers who can enhance operational efficiency. Our ability to deploy advanced APEX rig technology that enables faster drilling of more complicated wells is resonating with our customers. We are also seeing strong results from the broader adoption of our drilling automation packages. Nearly all of our rigs are now equipped with our proprietary Cortex automation applications, and demand remains high as we continue to develop new software applications to further improve drilling operations, with many of these in partnership with our customers. Looking ahead, the evolving shale landscape is characterized by more complex well designs, requiring rigs with increased load capacity that control deeper geological formations as well as longer and more complex laterals into higher pressure zones. Future demand will increasingly favor differentiated rig technology, positioning Patterson-UTI and our fleet of advanced assets and technology with a distinct advantage over much of the competition. The benefit of this differentiation has already been reflected in our ability to sustain margins at higher levels than we have seen during periods of activity moderation in prior cycles. As the market continues to favor high-quality drilling solutions, we anticipate that our advanced technology will further strengthen our position as we aim to sustain pricing and margins as customers seek out the best available drilling contractor to meet their increasingly complex needs. In Argentina, we are excited with our recent agreement to lease 2 high-spec rigs for work in the Vaca Muerta field. The multiyear agreement is a capital-efficient way for us to put idle assets in the U.S. to work internationally. The opportunity in Argentina is one of the most promising that we see to put our idle assets to work globally, and our fleet of rigs in the U.S. are well suited to meet the region's growing demand for unconventional drilling over the next few years. The expansion also complements our established position in drilling products, including Ulterra drill bits in Argentina. We believe that further planned increases in drilling activity in Argentina will reduce the available supply in the U.S. Our Completion Services segment delivered strong results in the fourth quarter. Segment adjusted EBITDA for the second half of the year was higher than the first half, reflecting the quality of our operations and the steps we have taken over the past year to add new technology to our portfolio, streamline operations through our digital platform and improve our cost structure. Our team effectively managed holiday downtime across several of our larger fleets, successfully securing work to maintain high utilization. Pricing and activity remained steady compared to the third quarter. Our frac assets remain highly utilized in the first quarter with almost 2.5 million horsepower either deployed in the field or in normal maintenance cycles. We have very little spare capacity, and our idle horsepower consists entirely of older diesel equipment that is not part of our long-term strategy. As we direct our capital towards high grading our asset base with additional Emerald 100% natural gas equipment, we are likely to have fewer fleets in operation as we continue to idle lower-quality diesel assets and focus on the premium market. Our equipment that can utilize natural gases and fuel is fully utilized. Our asset base will continue to reflect this high-grading strategy. Our nameplate horsepower totaled 2.7 million at the close of 2025, which is down more than 600,000 horsepower from 2 years. And we are likely to see a further reduction this year. Within our Completion Services segment, we continue to see growth opportunities in high-end natural gas powered frac equipment in our industry-leading and proprietary digital completions platform, which we call eos. Our Emerald 100% natural gas-powered footprint will grow again in 2026. And by the end of the year, we expect that more than 85% of our assets will be capable of using natural gas as fuel in some capacity. We believe our asset quality is among the best in the industry and the strong demand and returns for our high-end equipment position us to maintain resilient margins across our higher technology assets. We will reduce capacity of our older assets, and we believe the industry is also doing the same. Although public estimates of U.S. industry fleet count shows a decline, the total horsepower deployed has not declined and has remained roughly consistent. The frac industry is evolving towards larger fleets at the well site, a trend that we believe is being overlooked by public industry data on the number of active fleets, resulting in the frac fleet count becoming less of a reliable metric to determine industry completion activity. At the same time, the significant increase in pumping hours per day over the past several years has likely run its course. Some providers are encountering technical limitations on most of their fleets with our average frac fleet now pumping over 22 hours per day. With continuous pumping, our team has been leaders in executing on the growing trend to achieve 24-hour operations. But continuous pumping fleets require significantly more equipment on location relative to a more normal operation, which increases the cost of continuous pumping and further restrict supply. We have successfully executed several continuous pumping jobs to date as customers are currently evaluating whether the incremental increase in uptime justifies the additional cost. During the fourth quarter, we launched our proprietary eos Completions Digital Platform. Eos connects our customers directly with their live field data, allowing the customer and our Completions teams to improve real-time decision-making on the same platform. Our customers can eliminate the need for multiple third-party software platforms in their data flow and improve their overall data quality with a direct link to our digital performance center. The eos platform is hardware-agnostic, allowing our completions data and also third-party data sets to be delivered to customers on the same platform with no delays. The eos platform includes our advanced Vertex automated frac controls, which to date have been deployed across most of our active fleets and regardless of frac power type. Eos also supports our other services such as waterline, pump down, natural gas delivery and proppant logistics. This takes our completions segment to the ultimate goal of push button frac, and soon, with closed-loop decision-making, which will deliver more consistent completions to our customers and over time lower our operating and equipment maintenance costs. We have revenue-generating agreements in place now and are seeing increased customer interest for deploying this platform. Our Drilling Products segment delivered another strong quarter in North America, Revenue per industry rig remained close to company record levels in both the U.S. and Canada, underscoring our robust market position in drill bits. Additionally, we are having continued success with new downhole tool product innovations helping us to maintain relative strength in these markets. Internationally, revenue experienced a slight decline from the third quarter, primarily on lower-than-expected revenue in the Middle East. However, we achieved revenue growth in several important regions, including Latin America and Asia Pacific. Looking ahead, we remain optimistic that the international outlook for our Drilling Products segment will improve as we progress through 2026. We have opened a new manufacturing facility in Saudi Arabia that is now manufacturing drill bits in country, which should give us an advantage as growth resumes in the Middle East. Patterson-UTI continues to look to extend our leadership position while the U.S. shale industry undergoes significant changes. The company's operational excellence within both the drilling and completions segments has provided a competitive advantage, enabling effective navigation through the current commodity environment. Target investments across businesses will remain a potential focus. These strategic efforts are evident in the company's ability to generate robust free cash flow and maintain relatively resilient margins, even through periods of activity moderation. Even with ongoing commodity volatility, we are well positioned to deploy capital in ways that add value for shareholders, including through additional shareholder returns. We will continue to be flexible with capital deployment and evaluate a mix of dividends, buybacks and other potential growth opportunities. I'll now turn it over to Andy Smith, who will review the financial results for the quarter.