Thank you, Austin, and good morning, all. As you can see from our P&L, 2024 was a record year for Willis Lease Finance Corporation. The company produced earnings before tax, EBT, of $152.6 million. This performance was up $85.5 million or 127% from our prior year performance. Our stand-alone fourth quarter 2024 results of $30.4 million of EBT compared to $21 million in the fourth quarter of 2023, up $9.4 million or 44.8%. Walking through the P&L. Revenues for the year were $569.2 million, an all-time milestone for the business. Significant revenue drivers were core lease rent revenues for the year of $238.2 million and interest revenues of $11.7 million, which reflects interest income on long-term loan-like financings, which we have been offering as a product for several years. Growth in these lines items primarily reflect our increased total portfolio size of $2.87 billion at year end 2024. Our total owned portfolio is reflected on our balance sheet as equipment held for operating lease, maintenance rights, notes receivable and investments in sales-type leases. In 2024, the company purchased the equipment, including capitalized shop visit costs totaling $932 million. This growth was partially offset on the balance sheet by $126 million of equipment book value sales, $88.7 million of lease asset depreciation, $26 million of assets transferred to held for sale, a $11 million of impairment write-downs and $40 million of payments received against our outstanding notes receivable and sales-type leases. Maintenance reserve revenues for the year were $213.9 million, up $80.2 million or 60% from 2023. As you peel back the numbers, you can see that $39.4 million of these maintenance reserve revenues were long-term maintenance reserves associated with engines coming off lease and the associated release of any maintenance reserve liabilities. Long-term maintenance reserve revenues were up $24 million from the $15.4 million in 2023 as we had 20 engines and aircraft assets with long-term leases ending and having maintenance reserve realizations compared to six assets in 2023. $174.5 million of our maintenance reserve revenues were short-term maintenance reserves compared to $118.3 million in 2023. This 47.5% or $56.2 million increase in short-term maintenance reserve was influenced by our overall portfolio growth and more specifically, the increase in the number of engines on short-term lease conditions, the timing of revenue recognition of in-substance fixed payments and the systematic contractual increase in the hourly and cyclical usage rates on our engines. Spare parts and equipment sales to third-parties of $27.1 million in 2024 compared to $20.4 million in 2023, up $6.7 million or 33%. Our WASI sales channel provides a valuable outlet to recognize residual values on our engine portfolio, while also providing feedstock for our and our customer fleets in a tight parts market. Gain on sale of lease equipment, a net revenue metric, was $45.1 million in 2024 and was associated with $171.2 million of gross equipment sales, representing an effective 26.3% margin on such sales. This compares to a gain of $10.6 million in 2023 on $85.1 million of gross sales or 12.5% margin. In 2024, we sold or exchanged 43 engines and airframes compared to 29 assets in 2023. Our trading activities are an important part of Willis keeping the portfolio relevant. Maintenance service revenue, which represents fleet management, engine and aircraft storage and repair services and revenues related to management of fixed base operator services was flat to 2023 at $24.2 million in 2024. Gross margins were slightly negative at minus 1% as we are in the build-out stages of our fixed base operator services, which influence our aggregate margins. We believe that our maintenance service offering both enhance and create lease opportunities for the business and provides further vertical integration supporting the full cycle of the company's assets. On the expense side of the equation, depreciation for 2024 was up 1.7% to $92.5 million as we increased the portfolio size, but also manage portfolio profitability through strategic sales. Write-down of equipment was $11.2 million for the year, of which $10.4 million was from the fourth quarter, of which $6.3 million was related to our annual impairment review. Write-down of equipment in 2023 was $4.4 million. As an aside, as we go through our annual impairment process, we obtained appraisals on all of our engines and aircraft assets. When looking at our year end 2024 appraisals and comparing these appraisals to our 2024 year end asset book values, we see an excess market value beyond the book values captured on our balance sheet approaching $600 million. We believe that this highlights the effects of buying over the long-term, long-lived engine assets that tend to appreciate in value over time while they GAAP depreciate through the P&L. G&A was $146.8 million in 2024 compared to $115.7 million in 2023. G&A margins decreased from 27.7% to 25.8% as we benefited from the increased scale of the business. Increases in the overall G&A spend were predominantly related to personnel costs. Components of personnel costs driving the increase included approximately $14.4 million of share-based compensation, which was influenced by the rise in the company's share price throughout the year as well as one-time payments to the company's Executive Chairman and the company's President of $3 million and $1.7 million, respectively. Increased incentive compensation of $9.2 million, which is formulaically derived from consolidated pre-tax pre-incentive compensation earnings and approximately $9.2 million of wage increases due to hiring and general salary escalation as we grow the footprint of our overall business. Technical expense, which is predominantly unplanned maintenance was $22.3 million in 2024, which is down from $28.1 million in 2023. The $5.8 million decrease in technical expense was due to a lower level of engine repair activity throughout the year. Technical expense is generally unplanned maintenance, whereas engine performance restorations tend to be planned capitalized events. Net finance costs were $104.8 million in 2024 compared to $78.8 million in 2023. The increase in costs were related to an increase in indebtedness as total debt obligations increased from $1.8 billion at year end 2023 to $2.3 billion at year end 2025 as well as an increase in the quarterly average -- weighted average cost of debt, inclusive of our interest rate hedge positions from 4.22% in 2023 to 5.01% in 2024, which was partially influenced by the maturity of 2 interest rate swaps put on in 2021. The company also picked up $8.2 million in ratable earnings from our 50% ownership interest in our Willis Mitsui and CASC Willis joint ventures. The company produced $104.4 million of net income attributable to common shareholders, factoring GAAP taxes and the cost of our preferred equity, which was up 159% from our $40.4 million in 2023. Diluted weighted average income per share was $15.34 in 2024, up 146% from that in 2023. Cash flow from operations was up 23.8% to $284.4 million in 2024. The increase in cash flow from operations was driven primarily by the growth in pre-tax earnings and the related tax benefits. On the financing and capital structure side of the business, the company completed a series of financings and refinancings to diversify and increase its sources of funding to support the future growth of the business. In 2024, the company completed its third JOLCO financing, completed the company's and the industry's first-ever engine warehouse financing for $500 million, expanded and extended its preferred equity investment with the Development Bank of Japan and in the fourth quarter, refinanced and expanded its $500 million credit facility into a new five year $1 billion revolving credit facility. We continually look to diversify our sources of funding and minimize our overall cost of capital and have been successful accessing numerous markets over the years. We appreciate all the help we received from our banking and investor partners. In 2024, we were successful in returning capital to shareholders through a second quarter one-time special dividend of $1 per share and two subsequent regular quarterly dividends of $0.25 per share. Subsequent to year end, we declared and paid in February our third consecutive regular quarterly dividend of $0.25 per share. We believe that our ability to pay a recurring dividend speaks to the health of the business, provides our shareholders with a moderate current yield on their investment while not degrading the strong cash flow characteristic and equity growth of the business, which supports our overall growth. With respect to leverage, as defined as total debt obligations, net of cash and restricted cash to equity, inclusive of preferred stock, our leverage ticked slightly higher to 3.48 times in the fourth quarter from 3.25 times at the end of Q3 2024 as we took advantage of some year-end asset purchase opportunities to better position the company for the future. We will continue to target net leverage in the low-3s, recognizing that leverage may at times, as it did in Q4 of 2024, tick slightly higher as we execute on opportunities that enhance the characteristics of the overall business. With that, I will now open the call up to questions. Operator?