Thank you, David. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I would like to cover three topics this morning. Firstly, I will discuss our fourth quarter results. Secondly, I will comment on our full year 2024 results and I will use these results to provide an update on the progress that we are making towards our longer-range financial goals. Finally, I will talk about guidance for the year ahead. Then Kristin will provide additional financial details. Okay, let's start with our Q4 results. Comparable store sales for the fourth quarter increased 6%. This was well above our guidance of 0% to 2%. I would like to double-click on Q4 comp sales and provide additional color on two key factors that contributed to this strong performance. Firstly, in early 2024, we embarked on a strategy to elevate our assortment. In some categories and at some price points, this involved a higher mix of well-known national brands. For sure, this higher mix was important, but this strategy was not just about brands. In other categories or price points, we elevated the assortment in other ways perhaps through higher-quality or a higher weight of fabric or more up-to-date fashion or more embellishment. Depending on the category or price points, these are all characteristics that the customer uses to assess value. Another very important aspect of this strategy was to identify items to remove from the assortment. One of our senior merchants uses the phrase, eliminate to elevate. This means pruning items from the assortment that do not deserve to be there because the quality or the fashion or the value is just not good enough. We want every hanger to count. It is also very important to make the point that this elevation strategy was pursued within the framework of a good, better, best assortment. We went after opportunities to elevate the assortment at all price points, paying close attention to the need a deal, as well as the want a deal shopper. We drove this elevation strategy throughout last year, but it was most evident and powerful in the fourth quarter. I interpret our 6% comp sales growth in Q4 as just the customer telling us that they approved of this strategy and really loved our assortment. The second driver of our strong Q4 performance was that we were very nimble, flexible and responsive to trend in Q4 and throughout the fall season. Let me illustrate this by talking about the quarterly trend last year. In the summer, as we exited Q2, we were flying. We reported 5% comp growth for the quarter and the trend continued to accelerate through back-to-school. Then it dropped off significantly due to unseasonably warm weather from mid-September onwards. These warmer temperatures hurt our sales of outerwear, and at that particular time of year, outerwear is a critical business for us. The warm weather and the weak trend persisted until mid-November. And then our business took off as the customer began to shop for holiday. I cannot overstate how pleased I am with how well we reacted to this volatility in sales. We chased the trend in back-to-school categories in the summer, then pulled back very hard on cold weather businesses from mid-September onwards and then chased holiday businesses in late November and December. This nimble and rapid execution is the essence of off-price. It is an excellent illustration of what we are trying to achieve with Burlington 2.0. We know that we will never be able to predict the future, but what we can do using the processes, tools and capabilities that we have built is to react quickly and effectively to whatever happens with external traffic and the sales trend. I'm going to move on now and talk about our results for 2024 as a whole. I would like to discuss these results within the overall context of our longer-range financial objectives. Investors will recall that in November of 2023, we shared high-level financial goals for our business through 2028. We expect to grow total sales to approximately $16 billion and to increase our operating profit to about $1.6 billion during this period. We are only one year into this five-year program, but we are very pleased and encouraged by our initial progress towards these goals. The headline is that in 2024, we achieved very strong total sales growth of 11% and we expanded our operating margin by 100 basis points. As you will recall, there are three major drivers of our long-range model: new store openings, comp store sales growth, and operating margin expansion. I will now review the progress that we made on each of these major drivers in 2024. Let's start with new store openings. Our long range model projects an average of 100 net new stores each year plus a couple of dozen relocations of older oversized stores. In 2024, we opened 101 net new stores. But let me dissect that number a little further. Of course, there is no such thing as a net new store. In 2024, we actually opened 147 new stores. 31 of these were relocations and we also shuttered 15 mostly older and less productive locations. Mathematically this equals 101 net new stores. But my point is that the full impact on the chain is much more significant. Our long range goal is to grow and transform our store network. 147 gross new stores in 2024 represents strong progress on this transformation program. Okay, let me comment on the performance of our new stores. There are a number of important relevant metrics that we track. For new stores, these include the sales volume in the opening year and the comp performance in the first few years once the store joins the comp base. For relocations, we focus on the comp sales and the productivity lift that we see in the new location. We are pleased with how all of these metrics are tracking. I should add that when we approve a new location, we analyze the internal rate of return based on expected sales, profitability and CapEx. The rate of return that we are achieving on new store openings and on relocations is very attractive. I will finish up on our new store program by talking about the pipeline. Of course, at this point, our plan and our schedule for new store openings in 2025 is largely set. We feel confident in our ability to open 100 net new stores this year. For 2026, the pipeline is also shaping up nicely. It is early, but at this point, I feel good about our ability to also open 100 net new stores in 2026. I'm going to move on now and talk about the second major driver of our long range model, comp store sales growth. Our long range model projects that through 2028, we should be able to achieve comp sales growth in the mid-single-digits. In other words, between 4% and 6%. We are pleased that in 2024, we achieved 4% comp growth and this was on top of 4% comp growth in 2023. But we recognize that comp growth is the most difficult variable to project. There are internal and external drivers of the comp trend. We are confident about the internal drivers and our ability to execute. We have made huge improvements across our business in merchandising stores and supply chains. I am also very bullish on the longer term external prospects for the off-price segment and for our business in particular. Across retail, shoppers are voting for value and we are very well positioned to deliver that value for our customers. But with that said, we recognize that the short-term outlook is uncertain and it is important to plan and manage our business accordingly. We will talk more about this in a moment when I discuss our thinking and our guidance for the year ahead. But before I get there, let me finish with the third major driver of our long range model, operating margin expansion. As a reminder, our long range model calls for approximately 400 basis points of operating margin expansion between 2023 and 2028. We expect about half of this expansion to come from leverage on our projected double-digit top line sales growth and we expect the other half to come from opportunities unrelated to sales. These opportunities fall into two buckets. Firstly, higher merchant margin driven by better control and allocation of inventory, leading to faster turns; and secondly, productivity improvements and other expense savings in our supply chain. As I said a moment ago, we achieved 100 basis points of operating margin expansion in 2024. This was well ahead of our initial guidance of 10 basis points to 50 basis points. Kristin will provide more details later in the call. But the major drivers of this expansion were stronger merchant margin from faster inventory turns, ahead of planned savings from supply chain productivity initiatives, and sales leverage on fixed costs. Okay, enough about 2024. I would like to segue now to our 2025 outlook. As previewed in our third quarter call last November, our 2025 guidance is for total sales growth of 6% to 8% driven by 100 net new store openings plus comp store sales growth of 0% to 2%. Based on this comp sales range, we expect operating margin expansion of 0 basis points to 30 basis points. This 2025 guidance is consistent with our playbook. The outlook for 2025 is very uncertain with significant economic, political and geopolitical risks that could affect consumers. Rather than trying to predict what is going to happen, our approach is to manage our business conservatively and then be ready to pull back or to chase the sales trend if it is stronger. This approach served us well in 2024 and we hope for the same in 2025. At this point, I would like to turn the call over to Kristin. Kristin?