Thank you, Kiki. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining our earnings call for the fourth quarter and full year of 2024. Rani Therapeutics is a clinical stage biotech company that has developed a platform technology for the oral administration of biologics with proven bioavailability comparable to a subcutaneous injection. Our RaniPill technology is currently being evaluated across several high value indications including the obesity and immunology spaces. I will start the call by providing a brief overview of our RaniPill capsule technology platform and highlight the important advancements that Rani has achieved in its pipeline over the past year. Then I will share how we are leveraging the RaniPill technology to develop the next-generation of obesity therapies including our RT-114 and semaglutide programs. And then finally Svai Sanford, our CFO, will provide an update on our financial results for the fourth quarter and full year 2024. So let's begin. Please turn to Slide 5. At Rani Therapeutics, our mission is to end painful injections for the millions of patients living with chronic conditions. With this mission in mind, we have made significant strides since Rani's inception more than 10 years ago. The RaniPill capsule, which has been extensively tested and clinically validated, represents a breakthrough in oral biologics with its ability to match injectable bioavailability across multiple indications. The RaniPill technology consists of an innovative robotic pill with a proprietary enteric coating that makes it easy to swallow and allows it to pass-through the acidic environment of the stomach. Previous attempts at delivering biologics orally have struggled to pass-through the stomach and as a result have been unsuccessful. Once in the small intestines, the higher pH level breaks down the enteric coating and outer shell of the RaniPill capsule, which exposes the delivery mechanism to intestinal fluid. In the small intestine, a self-inflating balloon creates the pressure needed to inject the dissolvable micro needle and deliver the drug via a transenteric painless injection. Once delivered, the drug is quickly absorbed by the vascular system and the device deflates and is safely passed down. Our platform technology is intended to enable the oral administration of any biologic with bioavailability comparable to a subcutaneous injection, resulting in a potential for broad application across multiple indications. Our RaniPill technology is currently being evaluated in several high value indications across the immunology and obesity spaces. Furthermore, Rani has a robust patented portfolio with over 450 granted patents and pending applications. Please turn to Slide 6. Today, our platform technology stands as a proven success demonstrating consistency across a wide range of preclinical and clinical trials. In preclinical studies, the RaniPill has delivered high bioavailability compared to subcutaneous injection for 19 molecules including antibodies, peptides, and large proteins. In addition, we have conducted a 60-day repeat administration GLP study where the RaniPill was well tolerated and there were no serious adverse events. Clinically, we have completed three Phase 1 studies and in these studies the RaniPill has been well tolerated with no serious adverse events reported with more than 200 pills administered to 146 subjects. Overall, we believe the RaniPill addresses the challenges faced by chemistry-based oral delivery by having the potential to deliver drug with high bioavailability and dosing size and frequency similar to a subcutaneous injection. We believe this represents a distinct advantage that positions Rani programs for future success. Now on to Slide 7. Moving on to our pipeline, we are proud of all that we have accomplished in 2024 and thus far in 2025, especially the advancements we have made in our pipeline focus in the obesity space, a market projected to reach $100 billion by 2030 where oral alternatives could redefine the treatment paradigm. To-date, Rani has successfully evaluated four incretin-based molecules in preclinical studies. These studies underscore the potential of the RaniPill platform to enable the oral delivery of a diverse range of obesity treatments including both single and triagonist incretin therapies as well as semaglutide and RT-114. We are confident that the significant advancements made in our pipeline over the past year position us to further expand our obesity portfolio and realize the transformative potential of RaniPill technology. As a reminder, in June of 2024, Rani announced that it entered into a definitive agreement for the co-development and commercialization of RT-114 with ProGen Co., Ltd., a South Korean clinical stage biotech company developing next-generation long acting multi-specific fusion protein therapeutics. RT-114 combines ProGen's FC fusion protein conjugated GLP-1/GLP-2 dual agonist PG-102 with the RaniPill. The rationale behind this strategic partnership is to combine a potential best-in-class GLP-1/GLP-2 asset with the convenience and dosing flexibility of the RaniPill to create a strongly differentiated singular product in the obesity market. Rani shared a preclinical update on RT-114 last week and ProGen presented data on PG-102 at the Asian Association for the Study of Diabetes Conference. I will review the results and next steps for our RT-114 program later on in the call. Beyond RT-114, one of the most significant advancements in our pipeline over the past year is the introduction of RT-116, an orally administered version of semaglutide. Semaglutide selectively binds to and activates the GLP-1 receptor, mimicking its natural activity. GLP-1 is an incretin hormone and enterogastrone that plays a crucial role in regulating appetite and food intake by stimulating insulin secretion, inhibiting glucagon secretion and delaying gastric emptying. Last month, we shared encouraging preclinical data demonstrating the successful delivery of semaglutide via the RaniPill and I will provide an overview of those results shortly. Overall, we are encouraged by the progress we have made with our obesity program especially in the light of the tolerability challenges that limit the efficacy of first generation incretin-based therapies, thus highlighting the need for more tolerable options. While our current focus is on the obesity space, we have additional assets in development in our pipeline in immunology and endocrinology. Overall, we are open to additional opportunities to partner with pharmaceutical companies using our drug agnostic platform to advance oral biologics for patients. Now, I will review the data we shared this quarter on RT-114 and RT-116, as we leverage the RaniPill technology to develop the next-generation of obesity therapies. Please turn to Slide 9. In February 2025, Rani announced preclinical data demonstrating the successful oral delivery of semaglutide or RT-116 via the RaniPill. On this slide, purple represents RT-116 and the teal green represents subcutaneously delivered semaglutide. As you can see looking at the pharmacokinetic curve on the left, RT-116 achieved comparable pharmacokinetics to subcutaneous administration. As for pharmacodynamics, both groups saw comparable weight loss, which appear to be driven by decreased food intake. Weight loss coincided with rises in plasma drug levels, thus indicating there is a pharmacodynamic effect to treatment. Both groups saw comparable decreases in serum triglycerides and cholesterol. As for biologic activity, the relative bioavailability of orally administered semaglutide versus subcutaneous administration was 107%. Furthermore, RT-116 was well tolerated with no serious adverse events reported. Overall, we are pleased with this data. Currently, semaglutide is available exclusively as a subcutaneous injection for the treatment of obesity marketed in the U.S. under the brand name Wegovy by Novo Nordisk. While RYBELSUS offers an oral version of semaglutide approved for improving glycemic control in adults with type 2 diabetes, it requires daily administration at a significantly higher dose than its subcutaneous counterpart. In contrast, the target product profile of semaglutide in the RaniPill capsule would be a once-weekly oral administration of semaglutide therapy at a dose similar to the injectable, which we believe may be more convenient for patients and could lead to improved adherence. Please turn to Slide 10, where I will share the exciting preclinical results of our RT-114 data released last week. Rani released preclinical data evaluating a head-to-head comparison of orally administered PG-102 ProGen's GLP-1/GLP-2 molecule delivered via the RaniPill capsule, otherwise known as RT-114, compared to PG-102 delivered subcutaneously in 16 healthy canines. As you can see when looking at the pharmacokinetic curve for both treatments RT-114 yielded a higher Cmax and earlier Tmax with a relative bioavailability of 111%, compared to PG-102 delivered subcutaneously. Furthermore, these data confirm bioequivalence of RT-114 to subcutaneously deliver PG-102. The RaniPill capsule was well tolerated with no changes in drug related safety profile compared to subcutaneous delivery. On the bar graph on the right hand side, you will see the pharmacodynamics of RT-114 measured by body weight. Both groups demonstrated an average peak weight loss of 6.7%. However, there was more variability in results with subcutaneous dosing. Please turn to Slide 11. Overall, we believe that Rani has the opportunity to create a truly differentiated product profile with RT-114 combining the potential advantages of PG-102 with the convenience of oral delivery. ProGen recently announced preliminary results of the repeat dose portion of its Phase 1 clinical study. In the trial, subcutaneous PG-102 demonstrated weight loss in obese subjects with an average reduction of 4.8% and up to 8.7% following five weeks of dosing. Subcutaneous PG-102 demonstrated tolerability while reaching the target dose of 80 milligram within one month. Even with rapid dose escalation, there were no treatment discontinuations illustrating a potentially significant tolerability benefit of this molecule. Furthermore, PG-102 has demonstrated improved body composition fat versus lean mass loss compared to tirzepatide and dapiglutide in a diet induced obese mouse model. We believe this preservation of lean body mass could serve as a key differentiator for PG-102, particularly due to the recent FDA guidance emphasizing the critical importance of body composition in the development of obesity treatments. As a result, we believe that RT-114 has several potential key advantages in the competitive landscape. First and foremost, we believe RT-114 has the potential to demonstrate comparable weight loss, a better tolerability profile, and greater preservation of lean muscle mass compared to currently approved products. Also, a shorter titration schedule may facilitate a quicker onset of effect. This could address a significant challenge with current GLP-1 treatment options where many patients discontinue therapy before achieving clinically meaningful weight loss. And finally, the currently available oral therapies and those in clinical development for the treatment of obesity require daily dosing. In contrast, our target product profile for RT-114 is for less frequent and potentially weekly oral dosing. Looking ahead, we intend to move rapidly to advance RT-114 into the clinic in mid-2025. Overall, we believe that RT-114 has the potential to be a highly differentiated and desirable product in the obesity market due to its potential to have a favorable safety profile and to preserve lean body mass as an oral therapy. Please turn to Slide 12. Our target product profile for RT-114 and RT-116 is to be differentiated and competitive when compared with both subcutaneous and oral formulations of incretin therapies. Illustrated on this chart are approved obesity products and certain molecules in development. On the X axis is the frequency of administration and the Y axis is the maximum API dose per week. As you can see in this 2x2 matrix, the oral therapies require daily or twice-daily dosing with doses in the hundreds of milligrams. While for small molecules this dose does not dramatically increase the cost of goods. For the orally available peptides, it has the potential to burden the supply chain and potentially increase COGS dramatically. Of the therapies listed on the chart, RT-114 and RT-116 are the only proposed orals in development that are expected to utilize similar API quantity and dosing frequency as an injectable product. Now I would like to pass the call over to Slide 13 and to Svai Sanford, our Chief Financial Officer, to review our financial results.