Thanks, Luke, and thank you all for joining our call. I will start with an overview of our performance and key highlights, and will then share our outlook on the markets. Arun will then cover specifics on financial performance, balance sheet, and detailed guidance. I will wrap up with some thoughts on our strategic direction and 2025 focus areas before opening for Q&A. As illustrated on Slide 3, it's clear that the fourth quarter did not go as anticipated. We had a significant reduction in activity in Latin America, driven by a cost containment program in Mexico. The activity reduction was further amplified by scheduled shifts in the North Sea and a few other pockets. The Delta versus our guidance on revenue was a direct consequence of these changes. Nonetheless, I am very pleased with and proud of the Weatherford's team's tenacity and efforts to achieve our objective of delivering adjusted EBITDA margins exceeding 25% for the full year. Additionally, we demonstrated strong cash generation in the fourth quarter, allowing us to generate $524 million adjusted free cash flow for the year. From a regional standpoint in Q4, North America revenue was down 2% sequentially, primarily due to a continued reduction in U.S. land activity, which was partially offset by improved performance in our North America offshore business. Our International business was down 6% sequentially and down 3% year-over-year, driven primarily by Latin America and particularly Mexico. Importantly, though, our international business generated growth of 10% on a full-year basis, spearheaded by the Middle East, North Africa, and Asia region, which clocked in at 17% year-on-year top-line growth. Adjusted EBITDA margins for Q4 came in at 24.3%, driven by the impact of lower revenues. We have always maintained that we can improve margins even in a flat environment, but as the fourth quarter demonstrated, unfortunately we cannot fight math when revenues decline. Despite this shortfall, we delivered full-year adjusted EBITDA margins in line with our prior guidance at 25.1%, marking the highest full-year margin in over 15 years. Throughout the year, we experienced several notable growth success stories. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia grew 15% for the full year, while we also achieved high growth rates in the UAE, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, the UK, and Argentina. While North America remains challenged and was down 2%, I am pleased that the team has once again done an outstanding job of improving year-on-year margins. As shown on Slide 6, we have now paid two quarterly dividends of $0.25 per share and repurchased approximately $99 million of shares during the second half of 2024. While this amount may vary each quarter due to market conditions, we believe the stock at these levels is undervalued and represents a compelling investment opportunity. Now, turning to our segment overview on slides 9 through 11, the operational and technical highlights showcase advancements in new market penetration, technology adoption and continued innovation of our product and services portfolio. We achieved significant growth in a number of our product lines in 2024. Within DRE, all our major product lines exhibited significant growth. In WCC, completions remains our largest product line and grew in the mid-double digits in 2024, following a year of mid-20% growth in 2023. I also remain very excited about our Wealth Services product line. This is our customer OpEx focused rigless intervention business that enables production enhancement through innovative well-rejuvenation solutions and we have dedicated significant organic attention to it over the past couple of years. In three years, this business has grown over 50% and this represents a significant growth vector. Moreover, it is low capital intensity and growth is generated by creating a quick payback business case for customers versus relying on intrinsic activity uptake. As mentioned in our earnings release and specified on the segment pages in the presentation, we continue to secure a number of significant contract awards. Notable highlights include Kuwait Oil Company awarding Weatherford an MPD services contract to improve operational efficiency and reduce costs by deploying the Victus Intelligent MPD system. Additionally, ADNOC awarded Weatherford a three-year contract for rigless services as part of the reactivation of its onshore strengths. The latter exemplifies the growth potential we can create through Wealth Services offerings. We continue to focus on technology adoption and penetration and we remain confident that we can achieve growth above market levels by showcasing the value proposition of the technology innovations within our portfolio with major customers. Now turning to our view on the market, there is a fair degree of uncertainty that will clarify as the year evolves. However, at present, the outlook has a more negative bias in the immediate term. The biggest headwind we face is in Mexico where activity levels are anticipated to drop significantly compared to the first half of 2024. While there is a possibility of a rebound in the second half of this year, we are adopting a cautious and prudent approach regarding our capacity. While we benefited from extraordinarily strong growth in Mexico the past few years and continue to believe in its long-term potential, for the short term our focus will be on margins and minimizing cash exposure and risk. Coupled with Russia, this will create a drag on 2025 revenues and drive enterprise revenue lower than 2024. However, I am encouraged by the outlook in the rest of the world as countries like Canada, Brazil, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Thailand and Norway will help partially offset the decline. For 2025, total international revenues will likely be down mid-single digits, which is predominantly a function of Mexico and Russia. Excluding these two countries, international revenues would likely be up low single digits in 2025 and we see a continued outlook for stability there for the coming years. North America revenues are expected to continue the same trend as the past couple of years and be down low to mid-single digits this year. Primarily due to U.S. land that's partially offset by Canada. From a second standpoint on an enterprise basis that translates to DRE down high single digits and WCC and PRI down low single digits. However, there may be some mixed changes throughout the year based on customer plans and schedules. For Q1, the revenue decline is most pronounced in Latin America due to Mexico and closely followed by Europe, Sub-Saharan Africa and Russia due to Russia along with contract timing. Considering these markets and FX challenges, overall international revenues are expected to decline quarter on quarter by mid-double digits with North America revenue down low single digits. We have a good line of sight to a material increase in second quarter revenues. We have sized Mexico appropriately and while the total year revenue decline is projected to be in the order of magnitude of 30% to 50%, the run rate is really manifested in Q1 and limited sequential changes going forward. MENA growth is driven by contract starts, integrated contracts ramp up and new contracts commence in Europe. Additionally, this should be followed by another rise in revenues from first half to second half levels once again driven by contract starts that we have good line of sight to. As we began to see revenue softness in the fourth quarter, we launched plans to control and reduce costs across several aspects of the company while preserving our focus on longer term investments and innovation. These actions will ensure that we are keeping detrimentals in check and ensuring healthy margins at the intersection of each product line and country. Margins are expected to improve substantially in the second half as our cost and productivity programs take full effect. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Arun.