Thank you, Chris. Good morning, everyone, and thank you all for joining us today. FreightCar America achieved many significant milestones last year as part of our multiyear transformation, and I believe that we are now positioned to scale the business and generate compelling results. To support this belief, I will lean off with one very important metric. For 2023, FreightCar America earned $6,658 of adjusted EBITDA per railcar. This compares to a loss of $18,020 of adjusted EBITDA per railcar in 2019, which was our last full year of operation prior to beginning the transformation. During this time frame, the company eliminated very important levels of both fixed and variable costs. In addition, our prior manufacturing footprint limited the types of cars we were able to produce, as well as access to the skilled labor we needed for expansion. Fast forward and back to 2023, we achieved the just mentioned adjusted EBITDA per railcar on just over 3,000 deliveries and a footprint now capable of producing 5,000 or more railcars per year. As we ramp up production, we expect to gain new operating efficiencies driving more adjusted EBITDA per railcar on more railcars in total. In my view, this is the most important message today. Now to touch on a few key highlights for the full year. We delivered revenues of $358.1 million, a decrease of 2% year-over-year on deliveries of 3,022 railcars, a decrease of 5% year-over-year. The modest decline in top line numbers can be attributed to disruption in the movement of rail traffic at the U.S. and Mexico border at the end of the year. Following the border issues we experienced during the third quarter, the government closed the border at Eagle Pass, Texas from December 18 to December 27, which created a multi-week impact on our ability to both ship and produce railcars. Furthermore, recall that our fourth production line started just prior to year-end, which prevented significant additional scaling in 2023. With the resumption of rail service at the border, combined with our manufacturing facility now fully online, our teams are well prepared to meet demand. In addition to these headwinds, foreign exchange also impacted our results. But despite these, which combined were approximately $5 million in headwinds for the full year, we delivered full year adjusted EBITDA of $20.1 million versus $8.4 million in 2022, an improvement of $11.7 million or approximately 139% on slightly less revenue as we expanded our gross margin profile by 460 basis points from the prior year, achieving an industry leading 11.7% for the full year. In terms of our operations, we achieved several key milestones in 2023. Notably, we completed the build-out of our Castanos, Mexico manufacturing facility. We now have the capacity to seamlessly manufacture annual volume of 5,000-plus railcars or 10% to 15% of the annual demand for North America. Moreover, I am extremely pleased with the high level of operational excellence our team has already been able to demonstrate. Coupled with the ongoing execution of our commercial strategy, I am confident in our ability to further enhance the quality of our earnings as we flex the full potential of our capacity and operational and commercial strategies, some of which will be evident when Nick speaks to our outlook for 2024 in a few minutes. Turning to the fourth quarter. Revenue decreased 2% year-over-year to $126.6 million on deliveries of 1,021 railcars, both lower than expected, purely due to challenges around the already mentioned border closure and rail service disruption. Despite these headwinds, our gross margin increased 600 basis points to 9.6% compared to the fourth quarter of 2022 and adjusted EBITDA increased $5.3 million versus the same quarter of the prior year to $6.5 million, which equates to $6,357 per railcar. And this is in the face of an approximately $2.7 million impact in the quarter on adjusted EBITDA from the last end of year shipments and FX. As you are most likely aware from other industry participants, order activity took a pause in the fourth quarter with FreightCar America securing 135 orders. I will say that activity has picked up significantly since the start of the new year, but is still facing inertia from the high levels of caution being exercised by customers. We believe this inertia is due to caution with CapEx spending in view of mix confidence in the economic outlook, elevated interest rates, which directly impact leasing costs and improvement in railroad performance metrics, which has led some buyers to reevaluate new quantities needed. Despite the softness, we have line of sight to production of 4,000 to 4,400 railcars in 2024, which will allow us to achieve some of the scaling and levering we are so eager to demonstrate. With that, I will next turn the call over to Matt to discuss the market, then Mike for a more detailed view of 2023; and finally, to Nick to preview 2024. Matt?