Thanks Munjal. I’d like to welcome everyone to today’s call. I have the pleasure of Vikram, Venkat, and Satish joining our call today. We delivered another strong quarter in March, with revenues increasing 12% year-over-year to $267 million, slightly above the mid-point of our guidance range. Non-GAAP gross margin came in at 53.5%, in line with the midpoint of our guidance and non-GAAP EPS grew 70% year-over-year to $0.90, exceeding the midpoint of our guidance. Our Core IoT product sales increased 43% year-over-year to $68 million, fueled by strong momentum across both our wireless and processor products. This growth reflects improving demand trends, the ramp of new design wins and a clearing of prior inventories. Before we dive into the details of the quarter, I want to take a moment to address the global trade environment. At present, the direct impact of existing and proposed tariff policies to Synaptics is minimal. We will continue to monitor potential indirect impacts from supply chain realignments and changes in end demand. While the broader implications of these indirect effects remain uncertain, based on our current lead times and order activity, we currently do not see unusual activity that would suggest a material pull-in or pushout due to tariffs impacting our near-term financial performance. Over the last couple of quarters, we have seen encouraging trends across the business. The improvement in demand that started prior to the announced tariff changes has continued. Orders are steadily increasing, our backlog is growing and customer and channel inventories remain lean. That said, we continue to operate with agility and discipline in the face of an evolving macroeconomic landscape. We remain closely aligned with our customers to meet their changing needs, and our focus is firmly on the areas within our control. We are executing to our technology road map and growth initiatives, deepening relationships across our customer and partner ecosystem and maintaining a disciplined approach to costs. Through technology innovation, go-to-market expansion and operational excellence, we are positioning Synaptics for long-term success. Now let me turn to some highlights in each of our product areas. In wireless, we expanded our Varis connectivity portfolio with the launch of our first broad market device. As previously highlighted, this cost-effective solution for embedded edge IoT applications opens an incremental $3 billion in serviceable market opportunity for Synaptics. Our die size is significantly smaller than our high-performance solutions, reducing system costs by up to 50% and consuming up to 50% less power while still delivering top-level performance. In addition to opening a new SAM for embedded IoT connectivity solutions, we remain committed to maintaining our leadership performance in high-performance connectivity. We have launched our first WiFi 7 device for IoT applications. Our solution is designed to deliver up to 2x higher throughput, greater transmit efficiency and improved load balancing for greater reliability and reduced latency compared to prior WiFi generations. These enhancements make Wi-Fi 7 ideally suited for any real-time and video-intensive applications such as ultra-high-definition video streaming, interactive gaming, immersive AR/VR, security monitoring and home and automotive entertainment. Synaptics chips have been purpose-built for low-power, ultra-low latency and reliable long-range performance. We expect initial adoption in high-bandwidth applications with broader proliferation into other IoT devices over time. This quarter also marked important advancements in our second core IoT growth vector, processors. Last month at Embedded World in Germany, we extended our AI-native Astra platform with the launch of the SR-Series high-performance adaptive MCUs. These products feature a novel tiering approach to dynamically manage power depending on inference requirements. The SR-Series MCUs feature a compact form factor design that helps minimize cost, power consumption and footprint, enabling integration across a wide range of edge IoT applications. We see traction from customers across end markets, including consumer, automotive and industrial. In addition, our ecosystem investments are beginning to deliver results. ODM partners are building solutions and use cases on our Astra platform and are actively collaborating with OEMs to bring AI-enabled products to market. We are building on this momentum by investing in our go-to-market initiatives and adding to our business development and sales teams to drive growth in the edge AI IoT market. In the year since launching our Astra platform, we have made significant progress. Our product development efforts, design wins and customer engagements are on track. Turning to enterprise and automotive. Our PC products performed slightly better than typical seasonality in the March quarter, reflecting continued market share gains. While we are not factoring in a PC refresh cycle in our expectations, the key drivers such as an aging installed base, Windows 10 end of life and the rise of AI PCs remain in play. We see opportunities for growth from share gains and higher content. Our user presence detection solution continues to ramp with our lead customer, and we have expanded our engagement through design wins for next-generation AI PCs built on NVIDIA platforms. Additionally, we are seeing traction in expanding this technology into new and adjacent categories. In automotive, we continue to navigate near-term challenges and sluggish demand. Longer-term, we expect to benefit from the adoption of OLED screens as well as our innovative bridge technologies to drive growth as customers prioritize system-level cost savings in next-generation platforms. In mobile touch, our primary focus is on the high-end Android smartphone market. We continue to drive innovation with the introduction of next-generation touch controllers, featuring a differentiated multi-frequency architecture designed for foldable OLED phones. This new architecture offers low power consumption and low latency, enabling thinner and larger panels while incorporating enhanced sensing and filtering capabilities to overcome display noise. It also offers continuous time sensing for more flexible and cost-effective touch integration. We are currently engaged with multiple OEMs and LCMs and expect the first product based on this technology to launch in calendar Q3. The Android smartphone market has carried strong momentum into 2025, helped in part by China economic subsidies and a mix shift to premium phones. Now let me review our third quarter financial results and fourth quarter outlook. I will focus my remarks on our non-GAAP results, which are reconciled to GAAP financial measures in the earnings release tables found in the Investor Relations section of our website. Revenue for fiscal Q3 was $266.6 million, above the midpoint of our guidance with sequential and year-over-year improvement in core IoT products. Q3 revenues were up 12% on a year-over-year basis and flat sequentially. Revenue mix in the third quarter was as follows: 25% core IoT, 58% enterprise and automotive and 17% mobile products. Core IoT product revenues increased 43% year-over-year and 11% sequentially. Enterprise and automotive product revenues improved 14% year-over-year and were down 3% sequentially, mainly due to continued softness in automotive. Mobile product revenues were down 4% sequentially and 18% year-over-year as product shipments to a large customer reached end of life. Third quarter non-GAAP gross margin was 53.5%, in line with the midpoint of our guidance. Third quarter non-GAAP operating expense was $101 million, in line with the midpoint of our guidance range. Our non-GAAP operating margin was 15.6%, up approximately 270 basis points on a year-over-year basis and down 170 basis points sequentially. The sequential decline was mainly due to an increase in operating expenses related to our Broadcom transaction as well as incremental variable expenses. Non-GAAP net income in Q3 was $35.3 million, and non-GAAP EPS per diluted share came in above the midpoint of our guidance at $0.90 per share, an increase of 70% on a year-over-year basis. Now let me turn to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with approximately $421.4 million in cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments, down approximately $174.7 million from the prior quarter. Cash flow from operations was $74 million. During the quarter, we spent $198 million on the Broadcom transaction. In addition, we returned $37.9 million in capital through share repurchases, purchasing approximately 546,000 shares. In this fiscal year, we have returned approximately $128 million to shareholders through the repurchase of about 1.8 million shares or nearly 5% of our total shares outstanding. Capital expenditures was $5.4 million and depreciation for the quarter was $7.2 million. Receivables at the end of March were $132 million and days of sales outstanding were 45 days, down from 49 days last quarter. Our ending inventory balance was $132.9 million, which increased by $13.4 million from the previous quarter. The calculated days of inventory on our balance sheet were 96 days. Now turning to our fourth quarter 2025 guidance. Broader macroeconomic conditions remain uncertain, influenced by tariff policies and the global trade environment. While the direct impact of tariffs on our financials has been immaterial, the potential indirect impact on future demand and supply chain remains unclear. Based on our current view of the environment, we expect June quarter revenues to be approximately $280 million at the mid-point, plus or minus $15 million. Our guidance for the fourth quarter reflects an expected revenue mix from Core IoT, Enterprise & Automotive, and Mobile Touch products of approximately 30%, 54%, and 16%, respectively. We expect non-GAAP gross margin to be 53.5% at the mid-point plus or minus 1%. Non-GAAP operating expenses in the June quarter are expected to be $103 million at the mid-point of our guidance plus or minus $2 million. We expect non-GAAP net interest and other expenses to be approximately $1 million in the fourth quarter and our non-GAAP tax rate to be in the range of 13% to 15%. Non-GAAP net income per diluted share is anticipated to be $1.00 per share at the mid-point plus or minus $0.20, on an estimated 39.3 million fully diluted shares. To conclude, we delivered a strong quarter and successfully introduced several innovative and differentiated products. We continue to monitor and adjust to the evolving macroeconomic and geopolitical landscape. Our design win momentum remains robust, with key programs progressing through the funnel. We're seeing encouraging signs of market share gains and content expansion across our franchise markets. Overall, we remain focused on disciplined execution, strengthening our competitive position, and driving long-term shareholder value. This wraps up our prepared remarks. I’d like to turn the call over to the operator to start the Q&A session.