Thank you, Chris. I will begin my remarks on Slide 14. For the full year, net revenue increased 2% year over year. Excluding the impact of the 2024 loyalty rewards accrual change and other nonrecurring items in both periods, net revenue increased 8%, primarily driven by wholesale growth. Our wholesale segment, which sells packaged coffee and ready-to-drink beverages to retailers, grew 5% year over year, or 13% excluding nonrecurring items, reflecting stronger velocity, expanded distribution across both doors and items, and continued contribution from BRC Inc. Energy. Sales to mass merchants increased double digits and grocery sales more than doubled. Direct-to-consumer declined 5% for the year, but was slightly positive excluding the 2024 loyalty benefit. With the stabilization achieved in 2025, direct-to-consumer is no longer a material offset to growth elsewhere in the business, allowing wholesale performance to more clearly drive consolidated results. Moving down the P&L, operating efficiency gains in 2025 from restructuring actions and reallocating resources towards higher-return initiatives partially offset higher commodity costs and tariffs. For the year, gross margins declined 650 basis points and EBITDA declined more than 40%. As shown on Slide 15, the operating expense reductions we implemented combined with improving revenue limited the fourth quarter EBITDA decline to just 2%. In the fourth quarter, revenue increased 7% year over year, or 11% excluding nonrecurring revenue in both periods. Wholesale revenue increased 8% year over year, or 16% excluding nonrecurring items. Direct-to-consumer revenue increased 7%, marking the first quarter of growth in this segment in more than three years. Turning to Slide 16. We provide a detailed view of this year's gross margin drivers and the path forward. Gross margin was 32.1% in the fourth quarter, a decrease of 610 basis points year over year. One-time items, including startup costs associated with onboarding a new direct-to-consumer fulfillment provider and a noncash impairment of coffee extract related to a formulation change, pressured margins by 270 basis points, partially offset by 170 basis points of productivity and favorable mix. Coffee inflation and tariffs, net of pricing, were the single largest headwind, impacting gross margins by approximately 420 basis points in the fourth quarter and 350 basis points for the full year. Coffee prices nearly doubled from 2024 to 2025 and remain elevated due to weather-related yield declines and tariff-driven shifts in global supply. U.S. tariffs on coffee were fully removed in November, and improved harvest expectations have contributed to a recent price moderation. Arabica prices peaked near $3.75 in early January, and have since declined into the high $2 range, while the futures curve implies continued normalization through 2026 and 2027. We expect some residual impact from elevated coffee costs and previously capitalized tariffs to flow through inventory in 2026. However, pricing actions, productivity initiatives, and favorable mix are expected to offset those pressures and stabilize gross margins relative to 2025. Longer term, we remain confident in our ability to reach our 40% gross margin target. The path is driven primarily by structural levers within our control, including product and channel mix, trade efficiency, and supply chain productivity. The green coffee forward curve has recently shown downward pricing pressure which would accelerate progress. That said, reaching our long-term target does not rely on additional pricing action. Slide 17. Operating expenses increased 1% year over year on a reported basis. Excluding nonrecurring items related to our 2025 restructuring and certain legal expenses, operating expenses were lower by 7%. Marketing expense decreased 10%, reflecting lower nonworking spend and a reallocation towards programs more directly tied to revenue. Salaries, wages, and benefits were flat despite a 15% reduction in headcount, primarily due to the lapping of a $3,000,000 incentive compensation reduction in the prior year. General and administrative expenses increased 28% in the quarter and reflect a significant portion of these nonrecurring items. Excluding those items, general and administrative expenses decreased 25%. Fourth quarter performance demonstrates the operating leverage now embedded in the model as revenue improves against a more disciplined cost structure. Turning to the balance sheet. Through the equity offering completed in July, we repaid the outstanding balance of our asset-based lending facility and reduced total debt by more than $30,000,000 in 2025. We ended the year with $39,000,000 of debt outstanding, representing approximately 1.8 times net debt to 2025 adjusted EBITDA and approximately 1.4 times adjusted EBITDA based upon our 2026 guidance. At the end of the year, we had more than $50,000,000 of total liquidity, including cash on hand and available capacity under our credit facility. Cash used in operating activities was approximately $10,000,000 in 2025, with roughly $9,000,000 attributable to working capital normalization. We do not expect working capital to be a comparable use of cash in 2026. As previously disclosed, we received notice from the New York Stock Exchange regarding the minimum price requirement. The notice has no immediate impact on our listing, operations, or financial reporting obligations. We have the standard cure period and are focused on executing our business plan to regain compliance. Our focus remains on disciplined execution and driving long-term shareholder value. Moving to the outlook on Slide 19. In 2026, we expect revenue growth of at least 7% to approximately $425,000,000. This outlook reflects current visibility into demand trends, pricing already in market, and distribution gains that are secured and operationally in place while incorporating category volatility within our ready-to-drink portfolio. Our guidance is grounded in confirmed commercial drivers and does not assume incremental distribution wins or other actions that remain pending. As we continue executing against our 2026 priorities, we expect to incorporate incremental gains through our regular quarterly updates. From a quarterly cadence standpoint, we expect revenue dollars to build sequentially through the year, consistent with the progression experienced in 2025. In the first quarter, we expect revenue growth of at least 10% compared to 2025, reflecting current momentum in the business and the early year benefit of distribution gains implemented in late 2025. We expect gross margins in the range of 33% to 36% in 2026 compared to 34.6% in 2025. The range reflects continued execution progress and external variables that remain dynamic. We benefit from the annualized impact of pricing actions taken in 2025, continued productivity initiatives across our supply chain, and favorable channel and product mix. At the same time, coffee prices have moderated in recent months, but remain above the 2025 average cost, which limits the pace of our margin expansion. We also expect residual tariff impacts early in 2026 as inventory produced under prior tariff rates flows through cost of goods sold. In addition, we are making incremental trade and slotting investments to support distribution expansion, which will weigh modestly on gross margins as we scale into new doors. We expect at least 30% growth in EBITDA in 2026 compared to the $21,400,000 generated in 2025. The primary drivers of the growth are higher gross profit dollars from revenue expansion and a reduction in operating expenses. We expect operating expenses to decline year over year, driven largely by lower general and administrative expenses as cost savings actions implemented in 2025 continue to benefit us in 2026. Marketing expense is expected to grow in line with sales, while labor expense growth should remain muted. From a cadence standpoint, we expect EBITDA will remain second-half weighted. In 2025, approximately 15% of the full-year EBITDA was generated in the first half. In 2026, we expect the first half EBITDA to represent roughly one quarter to one third of the full year, with the balance generated in the back half of the year as revenue scales and leverage increases. While we are not providing formal cash flow guidance, converting revenue growth into higher profit margins and improved working capital efficiency is a core focus. We will continue to invest where appropriate to support growth, but at capital expenditure levels consistent with the prior year, we expect to be cash flow generative. We have simplified the model, strengthened our cost structure, and improved the underlying economics of our company. The actions we took in 2025 are translating to higher profitability, tighter expense discipline, and a stronger balance sheet entering 2026. We are carrying real momentum into the year, particularly in coffee. Pricing, distribution gains, and productivity initiatives are working together to expand gross profit dollars and improve returns on invested capital. At the same time, we are converting that growth into EBITDA expansion and operating cash flow, reinforcing financial flexibility. Our focus remains consistent: disciplined execution, operational efficiency across the entire income statement, structural efficiency within operating expenses, and thoughtful capital allocation. We believe that combination positions us to further strengthen the business and drive durable, profitable growth in 2026 and beyond. Operator, we are now ready for the Q&A session.