Thanks, Brandon, and greetings to everyone on the call. Turning to our fourth quarter financial results, revenue increased by 38.6% year over year to $140.3 million. The increase in revenue was primarily driven by higher domestic project volume from both new and existing customers. In addition, as Brandon mentioned earlier, our strategic growth channels of international, CC&I, and OEM contributed to year-over-year revenue growth in the quarter. Gross profit was $46.9 million compared to $40.2 million in the prior-year period, an increase of 16.7%. Our GAAP gross profit percentage was 31.6% compared to 37.6% in the prior-year period, and lower than we anticipated. We estimate that fourth quarter gross profit dollars were impacted by $2.1 million of incremental tariffs and logistics costs, $2.5 million of additional labor to support new products packaging and delivery requirements, and $0.5 million of additional plant overhead expenses, partially offset by higher volumes. These items negatively impacted our fourth quarter gross profit percentage by approximately 350 basis points versus our expectations. While you have heard us consistently communicate our long-term aspirational goal of 40-plus percent gross profit percentage, we were very clear in 2025 regarding our expectations of gross margin percentage to be in the mid to high thirties. In the long run, we continue to believe that a company like Shoals, who delivers highly customized and engineered-to-order solutions, deserves an attractive return profile. But we must also balance those aspirations with the real market opportunities we have in front of us today. Part of the transformation you see at Shoals includes a renewed focus on innovation, flexibility, productivity, and the maximization of cash flow. The top-line strength we drove in 2025 and to continue in 2026 is in part attributable to a larger opportunity funnel consisting of both traditional and newly introduced products, and a more flexible and customized approach to how we package and ship our solutions. Our strategy of driving incremental operating profit and finding balance between growing the business and driving profitability is one of the most important decisions we can make. And I believe we are doing the right thing. In the long run, the scale and leverage we will get on those incremental projects will allow us to continue to invest, diversify, and grow. The flexibility to make these important trade-offs to maximize profitable growth and ultimately create shareholder value cannot be done with a focus on a single profit percentage metric. For these reasons, for the foreseeable future, a gross margin percentage of low to mid thirties will provide us with the flexibility to win new customers, deliver new products, enter new markets, and continue the transformational journey we are on today. Moving on to selling, general, and administrative expenses. SG&A was $27.3 million, which is $5.8 million higher than the prior-year period, driven by increased legal expenses, partially offset by a reduction in stock-based compensation. Please note that in 2025, we spent a combined $30 million on legal professional services, an increase of 100% over the prior year. Recall that $18.3 million 2025 legal expense related to the case against Prysmian is identified and backed out of adjusted EBITDA. While these elevated legal costs impacted our results in 2025 and will continue in 2026, they will not occur in perpetuity, and we expect them to decline in 2027. Income from operations, or operating profit, was $17.4 million compared to $16.5 million during the prior-year period. Operating profit margin was 11.7% compared to 15.4% a year ago. Net income was $8.1 million compared to net income of $7.8 million during the prior-year period. Adjusted net income was $17.5 million compared to $14.1 million in the prior-year period. Adjusted EBITDA was $30.3 million compared to $26.4 million in the prior-year period, representing 14.7% growth. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 20.4% compared to 24.7% a year ago, driven primarily by lower gross margin flow through. Adjusted diluted earnings per share of $0.10 was 22% higher than the prior-year period. I now want to provide more color on what is driving the shift in profit percentages going forward so you can understand the gives and takes, what we can influence, and what are more macro in nature. Let us start with tariffs. While our intent was to broadly pass them on to our customers, in several cases, it does not appear to be possible at this time. We estimate tariffs had a $3.7 million impact to COGS in 2025, or an 80 basis point impact on consolidated full-year gross margin percentage, heavily weighted in the second half of the year. While this issue is uncertain and rapidly evolving, at this time, our guidance incorporates a similar tariff impact in 2026. We also began our move into our new consolidated factory in late 2025. While this is a huge undertaking, the full economic benefits will not be felt for some time. There are redundancies, additional training, setup, and processes that need to be redesigned and implemented. These initial inefficiencies are incorporated into our 2026 guidance and will be reversed over time as we increase throughput and drive lean process improvement through our manufacturing organization. This was the right strategic decision that will provide the capacity we will need for years to come. As we have stated in recent quarters, our plan is to be fully operational in the new facility by the middle of this year. You are likely familiar with the three legal actions currently in play at Shoals: litigation against Prysmian for defective wire, the related shareholder class action and derivative lawsuits, and the ITC case and subsequent district court case against Voltage. The cost for the defective wire case, both in terms of legal expenses and product replacement work we have done since 2023, is shown in our filings and adjusted out of our non-GAAP EBITDA results. However, the legal expense for the two remaining actions has not been called out specifically, and so investors may not appreciate the impact or timing of them. As a result of the expected elevated legal costs in 2026 related to these actions, we will provide investors with additional visibility. In 2026, we will also adjust EBITDA for the spend on the class action and derivative lawsuits. Our communicated strategy of defending share within our core markets and expanding our reach through new, innovative products that solve customer problems has yielded tangible results. It has enabled revenue growth of 19% in 2025, and an acceleration in 2026. While they have been well received by many new and existing customers, not all are accretive to gross margin percentage. Some expand our total addressable market, which opens opportunities by increasing the value to developers and EPCs. Evolving from offering a narrow product set to a diversified portfolio that resonates with a broader customer set will take time and patience, but it is the right thing to do for our customers and shareholders alike. Operationally, we consumed $4.1 million of cash in the fourth quarter, driven by higher accounts receivable and inventory balances at year end, and partially offset by higher accounts payable and higher deferred revenue. On a year-to-date basis, we have generated $17.1 million in operating cash flow. Free cash flow was negative $11.3 million in the fourth quarter, reflecting both the $7 million impact of remediation costs and elevated capital expenditures related to our new facility. These two items impacted free cash flow by a total of $14.2 million in the quarter. Our balance sheet remains high quality, and we ended the quarter with cash and equivalents of $7.3 million and net debt to adjusted EBITDA of 1.3 times. Our net debt was $129.4 million, a slight increase over the prior quarter. Backlog and awarded orders ended the fourth quarter at a record $747.6 million, a sequential increase of $26.7 million. Backlog constitutes $326.2 million of the total BLAO, providing us with confidence that the growth projections we have for the upcoming periods can be achieved. As of December 31, $603.4 million of our backlog and awarded orders have planned delivery dates in the coming four quarters, with the remaining $144.2 million beyond that. So turning now to the outlook. For the quarter ending 03/31/2026, the company expects revenue to be in the range of $125 million to $135 million, representing 62% year-over-year growth at the midpoint, and adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $16 million to $21 million, representing 44% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. Turning to the full year. As we enter the year with $603 million of backlog and awarded orders currently expected to ship in 2026, we remain mindful of the elements beyond our direct control. Similar to last year, we estimate the volume of projects that might be delayed out of the year as well as the volume of projects that we can still add to the calendar year. For this year, we need to also incorporate our new BESS customers and product delivery schedules that are dependent upon totally different factors than our utility-scale solar projects. As a result, our expectations for revenue is a range slightly below the $603 million backlog and awarded orders on the books at year end. We believe this range to be reasonable and achievable. Therefore, for the full year 2026, we expect revenue between $560 million to $600 million, representing year-over-year growth of 22% at the midpoint, and adjusted EBITDA in the range of $110 million to $130 million, representing year-over-year growth of 21% at the midpoint. In addition, for the full year, we expect cash flow from operations in the range of $65 million to $85 million, capital expenditures in the range of $20 million to $30 million, and interest expense in the range of $8 million to $12 million. With that, I will turn it back over to Brandon for closing remarks.