Thanks, Ryan, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us. I'll begin today with perspective and highlights on our results, including an update on industry conditions and the expectations going forward. David will follow with more financial detail on the quarter's performance and provide additional color on our updated outlook. I'll then close with some final thoughts. Overall, we continue to effectively manage through a mixed yet evolving end-market backdrop during the second quarter. Sales and EBITDA margins were in line with guidance despite higher than expected LIFO expense and seasonally weak sales activity in December. Our team responded well with strong underlying margin performance and cost control while continuing to expand backlogs and business funnels supporting a stronger sales trajectory into calendar 2026. We also remain active with capital deployment across many fronts, supported by our free cash generation and balance sheet capacity. As it relates to sales trends in the quarter, reported year-over-year organic growth of 2.2% was modestly below last quarter of 3%. Underlying sales growth showed signs of strengthening as the quarter progressed, with November sales up by nearly mid-single-digit percent organically over the prior year following a low single-digit percent increase in October. However, growth moderated in December with average daily sales rates notably below normal seasonal patterns. While monthly sales trends have been choppy for most of the year, we do not view December's weakness as indicative of the underlying sales trend developing across the business. Of note, December is always a noisy month, given seasonal factors that can drive variability in how customers operate plants and phase shipments. This dynamic was further influenced this year by the midweek timing of the holidays. In addition, we're encouraged by early fiscal third-quarter trends with organic sales month-to-date in January trending up by mid-single-digit percent year-over-year. Booking rates are also continued to show positive momentum across both segments. In particular, orders in our engineered solutions segment increased over 10% year-over-year in the second quarter. This is the strongest quarterly order growth rate in the engineered solutions segment in over four years, with a two-year stack trend continuing to improve sequentially. These positive trends are more in line with various underlying demand signals that have developed over the last several quarters, including improved customer sentiment and ongoing growth across our business funnels. We're also seeing slightly more positive trends across several of our primary end markets. Year-over-year trends across our top 30 end markets were relatively unchanged sequentially with 15 generating positive sales growth compared to 16 last quarter. So this is up from 11 in the prior year second quarter. In addition, when looking at our top 10 verticals, we saw six positive year-over-year, compared to five last quarter and three in the 2025. Growth was strongest in metals, aggregates, utilities and energy, mining, machinery, transportation, and construction during the quarter. This was offset by declines primarily in lumber and wood, chemicals, oil and gas, rubber and plastics, and refining. From an operational and profitability standpoint, we delivered solid performance that helped balance softer sales activity in December, and greater than expected LIFO expense, as well as a difficult prior year margin comparison as we had previously highlighted. Of note, LIFO expense came in at roughly $7 million. This was above the $4 million to $5 million range we had assumed in guidance and compares to the less than $1 million in the prior year second quarter. As in prior periods of increasing LIFO expense, our teams responded with a focus on internal initiatives, effective management of product inflation, and strong channel execution. David will provide more details shortly, but when excluding the impact of LIFO, gross margins were up both year-over-year and sequentially and EBITDA margins held firm over the prior year against a difficult prior year comparison. This performance reinforces the durability of our operating model and various self-help opportunities across the business. We also continue to execute thoughtfully against our capital deployment priorities. Of note, this morning, announced an 11% increase in our quarterly dividend following a 24% increase last year. The increase is consistent with our expectation of ongoing dividend growth as we align annual increases with normalized earnings growth and our favorable cash generation profile. We also remain active with share buybacks deploying over $140 million on repurchases during the 2026. These actions reflect confidence in our cash flow generation, as well as the value we see across Applied from our strategy, and long-term earnings potential. Further, we continue to evaluate various M&A opportunities across both our segments that could drive a more active pace of acquisitions over the next twelve to eighteen months. Our acquisition priorities remain unchanged with an ongoing focus on expanding our technical engineered solutions position across automation, fluid power, and flow control. We also remain opportunistic with M&A opportunities across our service center network aimed at optimizing our local market coverage and service capabilities. Today's announced acquisition of Thompson Industrial Supply is a great example of this. With expected annual sales of $20 million, Thompson is a nice service center bolt-on acquisition that will enhance our footprint in Southern California. They bring strong technical knowledge, and align supplier relationships as well as in-house belting and fabrication capabilities that strengthen our value-added services and competitive position in the region. We're excited to welcome Thompson to the Applied team and look forward to their capabilities. As it relates to what we see ahead, I remain constructive on our growth potential entering the 2026 and beyond. While end markets remain mixed and choppy, several growth catalysts are becoming more evident. First, our service center segment is well-positioned to support our customers' heightened technical MRO needs as they catch up on required maintenance across an aged installed equipment base. We believe there's a clear underlying trend developing around this theme. Of note, our US service center sales were up over 4% year-over-year the second quarter inclusive of seasonally weak December activity. We saw growth across both strategic national accounts as well as our local accounts. Local account sales growth strengthened as the quarter progressed which is an encouraging signal for broader industrial activity. We also continue to see stronger activity across several of our heavy U.S. industrial verticals that are break-fix intensive. This includes primary metals and aggregate markets where related service center sales were up by a double-digit percent year-over-year in the quarter. Segment booking rates were positive in the quarter while month-to-date in January segment organic sales are trending up by a mid-single-digit percent year-over-year. Our scale local and consistent service capabilities and technical knowledge of motion control products and solutions are driving greater growth opportunities in both legacy and emerging end markets. We also continue to benefit from sales process initiatives ongoing pricing actions as well as increased traction from our cross-selling efforts. During November, our service center leadership teams gathered in Cleveland to collaborate on our strategic growth initiatives cross-selling opportunities, and operational requirements moving forward. There remains significant excitement and energy surrounding our core business today, and our teams are making notable progress deploying a number of strategic actions designed to further catalyze our growth long-term. Within our 2026, we're starting to see this play out. With segment organic sales trending up by a high single-digit percent year-over-year month-to-date in January. In addition, we expect increased customer activity across our technology vertical which represents about 15% of our engineered solutions segment. Of note, we continue to receive positive demand signals from our semiconductor customer base. This aligns with broader market indications suggesting a multiyear upcycle is emerging for semi wafer fab equipment. As a reminder, semiconductor space drives the bulk of our technology vertical participation where we provide various fluid conveyance, pneumatic, and automation solutions to wafer fab equipment manufacturers and other providers along the value chain. Many of our solutions are directly specified into wafer fab equipment across both new and established equipment platforms. I would also highlight recent investments we've made in engineering systems and production capacity that should provide support to fully leverage these demand tailwinds moving forward. Combined with new business tied to broader data center build-out, we believe our technology vertical could provide a nice tailwind to our organic growth in coming quarters. Our automation operations are also in solid position to drive stronger growth moving forward. Automation orders were up 20% year-over-year in the second quarter. We expect various secular tailwinds to continue to positively influence demand for our advanced automation solutions, including structural labor constraints, heightened focus on safety and quality, and North American reshoring activity. These dynamics are accelerating the adoption of collaborative and mobile robots, machine vision, and IoT solutions as well as require strong application and engineering support that aligns well with our market approach and value proposition. In addition, our flow control team is focused on capturing growth developing within life science, pharmaceutical, and power generation markets across the U.S. With established product portfolios and leading technical capabilities around calibration services, instrumentation, steam and process heating, and filtration we are favorably positioned to win in these markets. Year-to-date, flow control sales have been modestly lower year-over-year, partially reflecting muted activity across the chemicals end market as well as a slow pace to project shipment phasing in prior year comparisons. However, flow control orders were up by a high single-digit percent year-over-year in the second quarter. We expect more productive backlog conversion into the 2026 based on customer indications and firming end market trends as well as broadening maintenance and capital spending on process flow infrastructure across the U.S., in support of energy security, and power generation capacity. Lastly, we're encouraged by improving trends across our industrial and mobile OEM fluid power operations where organic sales were positive year-over-year for the first time in two years during the second quarter while orders were up by double-digit percent over the prior year. This positive development is notable considering the drag this area of our business has had on our growth the past several years. As a reminder, our Fluid Power customer base includes thousands of small and midsized specialty OEMs across a diversified industry base. Our leading innovative engineering capabilities access to premier supplier technologies, and customer reach are driving new business opportunities with these OEMs as they begin to integrate advanced power and control features into their next-generation equipment. Structurally higher, we believe demand for these features will be as OEMs begin to reaccelerate production giving an increased focus on power consumption machine performance, and automation. Combined with our enhanced footprint and capabilities following our Hydrodyne acquisition last year, our Fluid Power operations are in a strong position moving forward. As it relates to Hydrodyne, we marked the acquisition's one-year anniversary at the December. I want to take a moment to thank our team's combined efforts over the past year in making this acquisition a great early success. We've achieved notable growth operational momentum from this transaction, that stands to further augment our earnings potential as underlying end market demand begins to build. Of note, Hydrodyne generated over $30 million of EBITDA in the first twelve months of ownership, with contribution building year-to-date in fiscal 2026 as we continue to align teams, and realize synergies. During the second quarter, Hydrodyne's EBITDA margins exceeded 13% and were modestly accretive to our consolidated EBITDA margin performance. We've made tremendous progress in leveraging complementary solutions. Harmonizing technical capabilities and systems, and driving operational efficiencies across the combined operating platforms. We're connecting Hydrodyne with new growth opportunities by cross-selling their value-added fluid power repair solutions across our legacy US Southeastern customer base. We're also enhancing their capabilities. Serving the rapid pace of innovation, development, across Fluid Power mobile systems, as well as providing fluid conveyance solutions tied to data center thermal management needs. Moving forward, we expect Hydrodyne's contribution to be increasingly accretive to our underlying growth and margin performance as this positive momentum feathers into our organic results. At this time, I'll turn it over to David Wells for additional detail on our results and outlook.