Thanks, Fran, and good morning, everyone. Recapping the quarter, we delivered record Q1 net sales of $1.1 billion, up 8% to last year on a reported basis, above the range we provided in early March. Comparable sales for the quarter were up 4%, and we did not see meaningful impact from foreign currency. By region, net sales increased 7% in the Americas, 12% in EMEA, and 5% in APAC. On a comparable sales basis, the Americas was up 4%, EMEA was up 6%. For EMEA and APAC, the spread between reported and comp sales was due to net store openings, third-party channels, with EMEA also benefiting from foreign currency. On the brands, Abercrombie brands net sales declined 4% with comparable sales down 10%. Consistent with our first quarter outlook, the sales decline was primarily due to lower AUR, as we worked to clear seasonal carryover inventory. Hollister Brands net sales grew 22% on comparable sales of 23% with both unit increases and AUR growth on lower promotions. Operating margin of 9.3% of sales was above the outlook range we provided in early March, delivering operating income of $102 million compared to $130 million or 12.7% of sales last year. Lower gross margin was partially offset by around 140 basis points of operating expense leverage, led by general and administrative expenses on lower payroll and incentive compensation. Consistent with expectations, marketing, which as a reminder is fully included in selling expense, was 5.3% of sales for the quarter and was the primary driver of the 110 basis points of deleverage in selling expense. We ended the first quarter with inventory at cost up 21%. Within that, inventory units are up 6%, so we're positioned to support future growth, along with four percentage points from freight and inventory actions related to tariffs, with year-over-year changes in product category mix driving the remaining cost increase. The tax rate for the quarter was in line with our outlook at 25%, and net income per diluted share was above our outlook at $1.59 compared to $2.14 last year. Moving to the balance sheet, we exited the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $511 million and liquidity of approximately $940 million. We also ended the quarter with marketable securities of $97 million. For the quarter, we repurchased $200 million worth of shares consistent with our commentary from early March, ending the quarter with $1.1 billion remaining on our current share repurchase authorization. Shifting to the outlook, global growth remains our highest priority. On the cost side, our 2025 outlook assumes a 10% tariff on all global imports into the US as well as a 30% tariff on imports from China. For China specifically, we worked for some time now to relocate resources of supply and this year's sourcing volume from China will be in the low single digits. Globally, we remain nicely diversified across 16 countries. We've been leveraging our agile playbook to build a list of mitigation strategies with our primary focus on the combination of supply chain footprint changes, vendor negotiations, and operating expense efficiencies. For AUR specifically, we are currently assuming no AUR mitigation in our outlook, as we do not anticipate broad-based ticket price increases. As always, we will pursue higher AURs through the combination of lean inventory and strong product acceptance. Net of expected mitigation efforts, the assumed tariffs carry a cost impact of around $50 million for 2025, impacting our full-year operating margin outlook by 100 basis points. For the full year, we now expect net sales growth in the range of 3% to 6% from $4.95 billion in 2024, with full-year growth expected across regions. We increased the high end of our prior outlook by flowing through our first quarter outperformance, with the second half of the year largely unchanged on net sales. We now expect full-year operating margin in the range of 12.5% to 13.5%. The reduction from our prior outlook range is primarily due to the estimated 100 basis point impact from tariffs net of mitigation efforts, with the remainder driven by a flow-through of the Q2 operating margin outlook. We are forecasting a tax rate around 27%. For earnings per share, we expect diluted weighted average shares of around 49 million, which incorporates the anticipated impact of 2025 share repurchases. Combined with the tax rate, we expect net income per diluted share in the range of $9.50 to $10.50. For capital allocation, we expect capital expenditures of approximately $200 million. On stores, expect to deliver around 100 new experiences, including 60 new stores and 40 right sizes or remodels. We also expect to be net store openers with our 60 new stores outpacing around 20 anticipated closures. At the current sales and operating margin outlook, we continue to target around $400 million in share repurchases for the year, subject to business performance, share price, and market conditions. For the second quarter of 2025, we expect net sales to be up 3% to 5% to the Q2 2024 level of $1.13 billion. We expect operating margin to be in the range of 12% to 13%. We continue to expect slightly higher costs from freight as well as around $5 million of tariff impact, net of mitigation efforts. We expect no leverage or deleverage on expense at the midpoint of our outlook. We expect the Q2 tax rate around 28%. We expect net income per diluted share in the range of $2.10 to $2.30, with diluted weighted average shares expected to be around 49 million, including the anticipated impact of around $50 million in share repurchases for the quarter. To close things out, our agile operating model has supported transformative growth and continues to be a catalyst for growth for driving consistent gains across sales, earnings, and cash flow. One quarter into 2025, we're executing with discipline to deliver against our near-term goals while keeping our sights firmly set on the significant long-term opportunities ahead. And with that operator, we are ready for questions.