Thank you, John. And good morning, everyone. As Steve mentioned, important steps were taken in 2023 to simplify our business and improve Xerox balance sheet on profit profile. For the year, we deliver strong growth in earnings per share and free cash flow, despite a modest decline in revenue, reflecting the successful implementation of a more flexible cost structure and rigorous operating discipline. Additional structural efficiencies enabled by our reorganization are expected to drive further profit improvement in 2024, our second full-year of reinvention. In Q4, revenue, margin and profit decline year-over-year due mainly to a significant reduction of equipment backlog in the prior year quarter. Revenue growth was further affected by the intentional reduction of certain non-strategic revenue. Excluding this factor, revenue would have increased low-single-digit year-over-year. Turning to profitability. Gross margin declined 130 basis points over the prior year quarter, due mainly to lower activity, higher product cost, and the termination of Fuji Royalty partially offset by strategic pricing action, lower freight cost, and the benefit of structural cost reductions. Adjusted operating margin of 5.4% declined 380 basis points year-over-year, due to lower revenue on gross profit on higher compensation expense, partially offset by the benefit of pricing on structural simplification effort. Adjusted other expenses net were $45 million higher year-over-year, due to lower sales of non-core business asset and an increase in non-financing interest expense. Adjusted tax rate was 15.2%, compared to 21.9% last year. The decrease was largely due to the benefit associated with change to deferred tax asset valuation allowances on redetermination of certain unrecognized tax position. Adjusted EPS of $0.43 in the fourth quarter was $0.46 lower than the prior year, driven by lower operating income on higher other expenses net, partially offset by the benefit of lower shares. GAAP loss per share of $0.50 was $1.24 lower than the prior year. This includes a $78 million after-tax restructuring charge associated with the recently announced workforce reduction or $0.62 per share. Let me now review revenue and cash flow in more detail. Starting with revenue, equipment sales of $458 million in Q4 declined 17.3% year-over-year in actual currency or 18.3% in constant currency. The prior year effect of backlog reduction drove more than 25% point of the year-over-year decline. Underlying demand for our equipment remains stable and order activity is gaining momentum as backlog on macroeconomic conditions stabilize. Total equipment revenue outpaced installation activity due to favorable product mix. Installations of high-end color equipment which were less affected by prior year backlog reductions increase year-over-year while entry on mid offerings decline. Declines in entry, reflect prior year reduction to backlog on current year constraint, while declines in mid primarily reflect prior year reduction to backlog. Post sales revenue of $1.3 billion declined 5.8% in actual currency year-over-year and 7.5% in constant currency, excluding the effect of non-strategic and lower margin paper and IT endpoint device placement which we plan to continue to reduce over time, as well as the exit of Russia, the termination of the Fuji royalty and the absence of PARC revenue. Post sales revenue declined only modestly geographically. Geographically, both regions declined in actual and constant currency. Given the significance of certain non-strategic items on our revenue trajectory in recent quarters and for the full-year. I will provide additional commentary to help clarify the underlying revenue trends associated with our core businesses. For Q4, the prior year reduction in equipment backlog contributed around 690 basis point to the year-over-year decline in total revenue. Lower sales and non-strategic paper on IT endpoint devices contributed around 160 basis point to the decline and the effect of lower Fuji royalty revenue on strategic action taken to simplify our business contributed around 190 basis point of the decline. When this combined effect are removed, revenue from our core businesses grew low-single-digit this quarter, reflecting stable demand on growth in Digital and IT services partially offset by decline in printed page volumes. For the year, this same item in the aggregate contributed around 230 basis point to the year-over-year decline in revenue. Therefore core business revenue for the year would have declined a little less than 1%. Let's now review cash flow. Free cash flow was $379 million in Q4, higher by $211 million year-over-year. Operating cash flow was $389 million in Q4, compared to $186 million in Q4 2022. Improvements were mainly driven by a net source of cash associated with a reduction in financing receivable and improvement in working capital. Finance assets were a source of cash this quarter of $92 million, compared to a use of cash of $169 million in the prior year, reflecting the benefit of our forward flow program with HPS and lower origination as expected. Working capital was a source of cash of $115 million, resulting in a $42 million year-over-year increase in cash driven mainly by a reduction in inventory. Investing activities were a use of cash of $8 million, compared to a source of cash of $17 million in the prior year due to lower proceed from the sales of non-core business assets partially offset by lower CapEx. Financing activity consumed $383 million of cash this quarter, which includes a payment of around $300 million of secured debt and dividend totaling $34 million. During the quarter, we repaid a bridge loan with proceed from the insurance of a term loan credit facility. Turning to segments, FITTLE origination volume declined 25% year-over-year, reflecting FITTLE change in strategy to return its focus toward captive only financing solutions. Captive product origination were up 2%. FITTLE finance receivable balance declined around 3% sequentially in actual currency, reflecting a run-off of existing finance receivable on HPS funding of FITTLE's origination. As previously highlighted, we expect our finance receivable balance to decline and normalized closer to $1 billion by 2027. FITTLE revenue was down slightly year-over-year in Q4 due to lower finance income on other fees associated with the decline in FITTLE finance receivable balance partially offset by higher commission from the sales of finance receivable assets. Segment profit for FITTLE was $7 million, up $6 million year-over-year, mainly due to lower bad debt expenses and lower intercompany commissions. Print and other revenue fell 9.5%, year-over-year in Q4, due to lower equipment and post sales revenue, reflecting the effect of prior year backlog reduction and declines in non-strategic items mentioned in my prior comments. Print and other segment profit declined 50% versus the prior year quarter, resulting in a 430 basis point reduction in segment profit margin year-over-year driven by lower revenue, partially offset by structural cost efficiencies and pricing actions. Turning to capital structure, we ended Q4 with $617 million of cash, cash equivalent , unrestricted cash. Around, $2.4 billion of the remaining $3.3 billion of our outstanding debt support our finance assets with the remaining debt of around $900 million attributable to the non-leasing business. Total debt consists of senior unsecured bonds, finance asset secured borrowing and the new term loan. We maintain a balanced bond maturity ladder over the next few years. Finally, I will address guidance. For revenue, we expect a decline of 3% to 5% in constant currency in 2024. Included in this guidance are the effect of prior year backlog reduction on headwind associated with the de-emphasis of certain non-strategic businesses, all of which are unrelated to the performance of our core print and services businesses. More specifically, the reduction of backlog in 2023 is expected to contribute around 200 basis point to the year-over-year decline in revenue, with another 200 basis point attributable to the decline of certain non-strategic revenue, including lower sales of paper. Excluding the cumulative effect of this item, core business revenue is expected to be roughly flat year-over-year, reflecting stable print demand, growth in digital and IT services and neutral macroeconomic conditions. As future strategic action involving product or geographic simplification are decided, we will update guidance and the respective effect of these actions accordingly. In terms of quarterly cadence, the headwinds previously noted, particularly the year-over-year effect of backlog reduction are expected to affect revenue growth more significantly in the first and second quarter of the year. Q1 revenue is expected to decline at a rate between that of Q3 and Q4 2023, with sequential improvement in year-over-year revenue trajectory expected throughout the year. We expect 2024 adjusting operating income margin to be at least 7.5%, an improvement of at least 190 basis points year-over-year, resulting in the realization of more than a third of the expected $300 million improvement in operating profit above 2023 level expected from Reinvention through 2026. The increase in profit and profit margin in 2024 will mainly be driven by structural simplification action enabled by our reorganization including the effect of the workforce reduction decision announced on January 3. Operating margin will be lowest in Q1 due to seasonal factor and the timing of structural cost reductions throughout 2024. We are expecting slight improvement in Q1 operating margin from Q4, 2023 level with more significant improvements throughout the year. To be clear, our ability to achieve profit guidance is not predicated on revenue growth, as the expected savings associated with our reorganization far outweigh the reduction in profit associated with lower non-strategic revenue. Free cash flow is expected to be at least $600 million in 2024. Free cash flow will once again benefit from a reduction in our finance receivable balance. Improvement in cash flow from underlying operations are expected to be offset by one-time restructuring payment, higher cash taxes and an increase in pension contribution. We plan to pay our $1 share dividend on outstanding debt obligation as they come due. Excess free cash flow is expected to be deployed opportunistically according to expected rate of return on investment, including opportunity to strategically reinvest in the business and acquisition. In summary, we enter 2024 on solid footing, with stable demand for our product and services, momentum in orders and signing a simplified operating structure and clear line of sight to savings that will enable another year of meaningful improvement in operating profit. We will now open the line for Q&A.