Great job, Jeff. Thank you. Welcome, everyone. Happy Valentine's Day. I'm here with John Gottfried, Stuart Seeley and A.J. Levine. I'll give a few comments, then hand the call over to A.J. Then John will discuss our earnings, our balance sheet metrics and our guidance. And after that, we're here to take questions. As you can see in our earnings release, our 2023 performance was very strong. Same property NOI growth was nearly 6% and new lease spreads were over 40%. And this same property NOI growth is comping off prior year's growth of over 6% as well. Fourth quarter results also showed continued strength, driven by the Street retail portion of our portfolio, delivering 10% same store NOI growth and strong leasing spreads. I'll let John discuss the moving pieces of our earnings in detail. But in short, our goal of creating superior top line growth at the property level and having that growth translate into bottom line's earnings growth remains on track. As we look to 2024 and beyond, the leasing momentum we saw last year is continuing. This is evidenced by both our significant signed not open activity and the leasing pipeline behind it. And while in some respects, last quarter might be viewed as just another solid quarter from an internal growth perspective, I think there is a more meaningful shift going on. We are now past retail simply experiencing a COVID list or a COVID recovery. The shift in retailer sentiment and retailer activity feels more secular than cyclical and thus more long lasting than just a rebound. While we first saw this as a lift in the suburban and necessity portions of our portfolio, and we're still seeing strong solid performance there. The longer term growth is now having its most material impact within the Street retail component of our portfolio, and it is looking more likely that, that growth rate in Street retail has real staying power. A.J. Levine will discuss the drivers of this trend in further detail. But as it relates to internal growth, these secular tailwinds should add further support to the multiyear growth goals that we have been discussing and delivering on for the last couple of years. Then along with continued momentum on internal growth after several relatively quiet years, actionable external growth opportunities are starting to emerge. We are seeing a narrowing of the bid-ask spread and increased likelihood that accretive growth will start to pencil out. And since retail has not been an area of focus by institutional investors over the last several years, there are just fewer well positioned capable buyers. Now granted, the inverted yield curve and elevated interest rates are still a headwind for improving deal flow, but this is beginning to shift. Increased optimism about improving borrower cost, coupled with resilient tenant demand is helping underwriting. And more significantly, whether due to more realistic appraised values or other factors, sellers seem to be more realistic and more willing to transact. A couple of quarters ago, I thought the majority of our activity would be distressed focused, either discounted debt or forced sales, and it's still likely that there will be a fair amount of what we refer to as special situations, certainly for office, but other products like retail as well. Given the nonperforming nature of much of this type of investing we’ll likely participate in distressed special situations in conjunction with one of our strategic capital relationships. But more importantly, we are now seeing sellers begin to emerge that are not highly distressed, just motivated. They may have some staying power, but not unlimited patients. And this shift means our pipeline for a broader variety of opportunities is coming together nicely. You will hopefully see this reflected later this year and for years to come. So here's how we're thinking about external growth. In terms of product types within open air, we consider ourselves to be highly confident in all areas of open retail and try to position ourselves to be open minded as to which growth opportunities, which capital structure, which risk adjusted returns are most compelling at any given time. Here's how that landscape looks today. In terms of power or junior anchor dominated regional centers, these will have the highest going in yields. But in order to have net effective growth special attention will have to be paid to tenant turnover and the cost of retenanting, which heavily impacts net effective growth. We still think this area can provide attractive risk adjusted returns. But as was the case with our Fund V investing, we'll continue to focus on this investing in the fund or strategic venture format. Then in terms of supermarket or neighborhood anchored centers, investor demand remains strong because of their resilience during COVID, the defensive profile, the ease of underwriting. And this segment is probably the most covered or most crowded in terms of competition for bidding. So unless there's a value add component, it will be hard for us to be constructive. We could add the right supermarket anchored assets, both on balance sheet or in a joint venture structure. But in either case, growth opportunities will have to be compelling. In terms of Street retail, after several bumpy years, we believe this segment will have the highest long term net effective growth. For a variety of reasons, notwithstanding the ongoing rebound in fundamentals, Street retail seems to be trading at an elevated floor on cap rates with going in yields that don't appear to take into account the growth potential. And this is creating an opportunity for asymmetrical upside. Now granted, Street retail requires the highest level of expertise to underwrite as it lacks some of the uniformity of other open air assets. And while not all Streets, not all markets are recovering equally, the initial fear that Street retail was too idiosyncratic or a zero sum game with the Sunbelt winning and other key markets losing, it's turning out not to be the case. For most retailers, there is more synergy than cannibalization, meaning retailers can thrive in SoHo and [national]. And since there are more markets that are thriving, from a scale and opportunity set perspective, we think there should be plenty of deals of size out there. We think we are entering a period where our shareholders will benefit from the expansion of our highly differentiated Street retail portfolio in our core portfolio, provided we can do it on a leverage neutral earnings and NAV accretive basis. Given our expertise and our extensive experience in this space, Acadia is well positioned to be a consolidator in Street retail assets in this phase of the cycle. While a key focus will be to the extent practical to grow the Street retail component on balance sheet, adding to the 70% of our current portfolio, that is Street or urban, we suspect that there could also be several larger opportunities that will also include the leveraging of our strategic capital relationships. We are in a period we're having access to multiple sources of equity and debt should inure to our shareholders' benefit. Finally, from a capital allocation and deployment perspective, a few thoughts. Capital recycling will be part of our growth strategy. It can come from multiple areas. First, from portions of our core portfolio that might not be as high growth or not consistent with our long term growth strategy. And then second, from portions of our over $2 billion of assets currently in our fund or investment management platform. Investor interest is growing and we should be able to capitalize on this increased interest. This means we should be able to bring in new capital on a non-diluted basis and then redeploy it accretively. Given our recent equity issuance, our balance sheet metrics are getting to where we want them, so we can also afford to be strategic with our capital recycling initiatives. Finally, since it doesn't take much volume to move the needle for us, even a few acquisitions can add meaningfully to our external growth. So to conclude, the stars are beginning to align this year. We will be keenly focused on the three key drivers of our growth; first, driving solid internal growth; second, maintaining a solid and flexible balance sheet; and third, executing on our accretive external growth strategy. The combination of improving fundamentals, improving debt markets, improving bid ask spread and investors inching their way back to retail are all positive trends. And we're in a great position, having access to both public and private capital to use our platform to execute a highly accretive growth strategy. And with that, I'd like to thank the team for their hard work last year, and I will turn the call over to A.J. Levine.