Thanks, Reggie, and good morning. My remarks today will focus on our quarterly results, our 2026 outlook, and then closing with an update on our balance sheet. Our message is clear. We are continuing to see strength across our dual platforms. And with multiple avenues of growth, our team is laser-focused on driving earnings and NAV growth. Starting with our fourth quarter results. We reported same property NOI growth of 6.3% for the quarter and 5.7% for the year. Coming in at the upper end of our guidance, with our street and urban portfolio once again driving our growth. And this top-line growth is hitting our bottom-line earnings. We reported $0.34 a share for the fourth quarter, which included $0.03 of gains from our final sale of Albertsons shares. Just to lay out a clean run rate, once we back out the 3¢ of Albertsons gains and the one-time penny of net real estate tax savings highlighted in our release, we're at 30¢ for the quarter, which is sequentially up an incremental penny from the 29¢ also net of the gains and promotes that we reported in Q3. Additionally, and in line with our goals, we increased the REIT's economic occupancy another 30 basis points to 93.9%. It's also worth highlighting that our street and urban economic occupancies sequentially increased an additional 80 basis points during the fourth quarter and 370 basis points over the course of 2025. But as we've said before, not all occupancy is created equal. With street and urban occupancy at approximately 90%, versus prior peak levels that were in excess of 95%, we continue to see meaningful embedded NOI and earnings growth. I'd now like to highlight a few items from our signed, not open pipeline. First, our pipeline of $8.9 million at December 31 remains elevated with ABR at our share of approximately 4% of in-place rents. And with the incremental leasing opportunities that AJ discussed, we should be able to maintain an opportunity to exceed our current pipeline setting us up for continued growth heading into 2027 and beyond. Substantially, of our $8.9 million pipeline is expected to commence in 2026 with roughly 25% commencing in each of Q1 and Q2. And the remaining portion commencing in the second half of the year heavily weighted towards the fourth quarter. And based on this timing, we expect approximately $4 million of ABR to be reflected in NOI in 2026, with the incremental $4.9 million in 2027. Secondly, in terms of the portion of our pipeline related to our same store pool, we executed $1.5 million of new same store leases fully replacing the $1.5 million of leases that commenced during the quarter. Meaning our ongoing same property growth trajectory remains intact. Third, and as a reminder, our pipeline reflects only incremental ABR, and excludes leases on occupied space. And we have over $1 million of executed leases on spaces currently occupied, which is incremental to the $8.9 million in our pipeline. Now moving on to our guidance. As a reminder and outlined in our release, we have simplified our reporting beginning with our 2026 guidance. And we want to thank both the buy side and sell side for their input and their strong support in making this important change. Our new metric, FFO as adjusted, excludes gains from our investment management business along with any material, noncomparable items that we believe are not reflective of our core operating results. As outlined in our release, we are anticipating 2026 FFO as adjusted between $1.21 and $1.25 and projecting same property NOI growth of 5% to 9%, excluding redevelopments. With our Street anticipated to deliver about 400 basis points of outperformance as compared to our suburban portfolio. I want to start with a few thoughts on our guidance ranges and what factors will determine where we ultimately land. Keeping in mind that $1.4 million currently represents about a penny of FFO, and a 100 basis points of annual safe property NOI growth. And three key factors will determine where we land within these ranges. First, our assumptions regarding rent commencement dates on executed leases. With 4% of our ABR anticipated to commence in 2026, each month of an acceleration or delay as compared to our initial projection equates to approximately $750,000. Second is credit loss. At the midpoint of our guidance, we've assumed approximately 115 basis points against minimum rents, which is in addition to known or specific reserves we have factored in for known tenant issues. And for context, 150 basis points feels fairly conservative relative to the roughly 50 basis points have averaged over the prior two years. And lastly and potentially most impactful, is the pride lose strategy that AJ discussed. While it's not factored into our base case, our active management and leasing teams are actively pruning our portfolio to accelerate these opportunities. And while greater success in these efforts may impact our short-term results, it accelerates our long-term growth and value creation. Also want to hit on a few other items as it relates to our 2026 assumptions. First, alongside our projected 5% to 9% same property NOI growth, we expect total pro rata NOI including redevelopments and investment management, to increase approximately 15% to roughly $230 million at the midpoint compared with the approximately $200 million that we reported in 2025. Secondly, and as outlined in our release, our earnings guidance, including the numbers I the NOI numbers I just mentioned, not factor in any acquisitions or dispositions other than those that we've reported in our release. And as you've heard from Ken and Reggie, we have consistently delivered in excess of $500 million of annual transaction volume we continue to target a penny of FFO accretion incremental gross asset value acquired. Whether it's for the REIT or our I'm business. And finally, I'll close with an update on our balance sheet. With our pro rata debt to EBITDA at about five times, meaningful liquidity on our credit facilities, along with anticipated capital coming back from our investment management and structured finance businesses not only have we fully funded our Henderson development project, our balance sheet has several $100 million of dry powder on call to play offense. Additionally, we do not have any material debt maturities in 2026, and are well hedged against interest rate volatility. And with our weighted average borrowing cost of 4.5%, and five-year unsecured funding, available to us today at similar pricing we do not expect any material interest expense pressure as our debt maturities roll. The course of 2026, we intend to continue working with our capital partners to strategically and accretively refinance and extend duration across our portfolio. As debt markets remain wide open to us, with both the availability of credit and spreads at record lows. So in summary, not only were you projecting strong earnings and NOI growth in 2026, our multiyear goal is to position our portfolio to deliver sustained, 5% growth. And as we look beyond 2026, we have multiple clearly identifiable drivers that position us to achieve just that. And as Ken laid out in his remarks, those drivers include street lease-up and mark-to-market opportunities. We have roughly 500 basis points of embedded street occupancy upside, along with meaningful mark-to-market on expiring leases. And when combined with a 3% contractual rent growth, in our existing street leases, this adds an opportunity for several 100 basis points of incremental growth. Second is our redevelopments. We already have $3.5 million of executed leases in our redevelopment pipeline that we anticipate will come online in late 2026. With the vast majority of it coming from our two redevelopment projects in San Francisco. And as AJ mentioned, leasing momentum in San Francisco continues to build as tenant demand returns. And upon stabilization, inclusive of our S and O pipeline, we estimate these two projects alone will contribute an additional $7 to $9 million of NOI beyond those amounts included in 2026. Translating to approximately 3 to 5¢ of incremental FFO net of the capitalized interest in and retenanting cost. Third is Henderson Avenue. We've discussed on past calls, Henderson is tracking to stabilize in 2027 and 2028, and we continue to anticipate a high single-digit yield on our cost. Which means that upon stabilization, the project is poised to deliver 3 to 5¢ of incremental FFO. And keep in mind, that's just phase one of the project. We already have and will continue to add sites on Henderson Avenue. Which we anticipate quickly become one of our top-performing street retail quarters. And lastly is external growth. With the balance sheet positioned for offense, several $100 million of available capacity, we will remain disciplined but anticipate being highly active on the investment. These are just a few of the key drivers that give us confidence of achieving sustained 5% growth. With opportunity for additional upside on items I haven't even touched on. Whether it's City Point in Brooklyn, lease-up of 840 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago, the pride lose opportunities on our street, or the numerous and accretive redevelopment opportunities embedded throughout our portfolio. At the sake of getting to your questions, I will stop here and turn the call over to the operator for questions.