When looking back on 2025, three main fundamental forces caused propane inventories to move higher than market expectations. Slide four titled “U.S. Propane Stocks and Propane Days of Supply” identifies these factors on the chart on the left. As we enter 2025, propane inventory levels were trending with the historic five-year average. However, U.S. trade tensions with China, the resulting reshuffling of U.S. propane exports to different destinations impacted U.S. export volumes. Additionally, this tariff shakeup came at a time when export expansions and existing terminals in the Gulf Coast were facing start-up delays or operational issues. Importantly, the chart on the right-hand of the slide highlights the demand pull that persisted in the propane market last year despite these identified headwinds. Days of supply in 2025 consistently trended within the five-year range, due to strong export and domestic demand. Turning to the supply side, while NGL supply is expected to continue to increase over the coming years, the rate of growth will likely moderate due to weaker oil prices. As shown on Slide five titled “U.S. C3+ Supply Growth Slows,” the chart on the left displays year-over-year U.S. supply growth decreased from 328,000 barrels a day in 2024 to 131,000 barrels a day in 2026 and further to 45,000 barrels a day year-over-year in 2027. This deceleration is expected due to the lower oil price environment and the resulting reduction in oil-focused drilling activity, especially in the Permian Basin. This trend is likely to continue in the current WTI price environment. Turning to exports, significant LPG export capacity expansion was added in 2025 and there is more to come in 2026, entirely removing any potential market bottlenecks. Slide number six titled “Timely In-Service Dates for LPG Export Expansions” illustrates that LPG export capacity should be unconstrained through at least 2028, allowing U.S. barrels to continue to clear the market. Slide number seven illustrates the significant global NGL demand growth that is forecast for 2026. Following several years of declining demand growth, 2026 demand is expected to grow 563,000 barrels a day, the largest annual increase since 2021, driven by LPG increases in the steam crackers, rising PDH demand, and annual rescom growth. On the bottom of the slide, you can see the C3+ NGL price going back to 2021. Today, prices are above $35 per barrel, but with the backwardated strip, the annual average is $33.5 per barrel. To put pricing in the context, a $5 move in C3+ NGL pricing equates to $225,000,000 in annual free cash flow. All of these factors lead third-party analysts to forecast propane storage levels returning to within the normal five-year range by 2026, which should result in improving prices throughout the year. With that, I will now turn it over to our Senior Vice President of Natural Gas Marketing, Justin B. Fowler, to discuss the natural gas markets. Thanks, Dave. I will start on Slide number eight, which shows the winter-to-date residential and commercial demand. This winter, ResCom demand has been extremely strong, with November through February averaging nearly 42 Bcf per day. This results in an incremental 350 Bcf of natural gas demand compared to the five-year average, and is over 1 Bcf above last year. Further, January demand averaged over 50 Bcf, ranking it as the third strongest January ResCom demand on record. January also saw the highest level of industrial natural gas demand on record dating back to 2005, which we believe to be in part related to the continued growth in behind-the-meter power demand for data centers. Turning to Slide number nine titled “Natural Gas Storage.” The result of this strong winter demand has been a dramatic flip in storage levels. At the start of the winter in November, storage was approximately 200 Bcf above the five-year level. Today, we are approximately 140 Bcf below the five-year level. This should result in exiting withdrawal season below the five-year average. Last year, we experienced mild summer demand, which drove storage levels to the high end of the five-year range by the fall.