Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. This is an exciting time for Blackstone Inc., with three powerful dynamics coming together. First, the deal environment has reached escape velocity on the back of moderating cost of capital. Secondly, the AI revolution is creating generational opportunities to invest private capital at scale, both debt and equity, while creating attractive gains across multiple sectors. And third, adoption of private markets continues to deepen across all three of our major customer channels: institutions, insurance, and individual investors. These dynamics are translating to outstanding results across the firm. Starting with our institutional business, which makes up over half of our AUM and comprised over half of 2025 inflows. We are seeing strong demand today across numerous open-ended and drawdown fund strategies. In infrastructure, our dedicated platform grew a remarkable 40% year over year to $77 billion, including over $4 billion raised in the fourth quarter, underpinned by exceptional investment performance. The commingled VIP strategy has generated 18% net returns annually since inception seven years ago, and 2025 was one of the best years yet, with broad-based gains across digital energy and transportation infrastructure. Our QTS data center business was again the largest single driver of returns for BIP as well as in real estate. Speaking with our open-ended strategies, BXMA reported excellent results again in Q4. The composite gross return for BXMA's largest strategy has been positive for twenty-three straight quarters and exceeded 13% for the year in both 2025 and 2024, the best since 2009. Investors are responding favorably with $6.3 billion of net inflows for BXMA in 2025, representing the highest net fundraising in nearly fifteen years and lifting AUM 14% year over year to a record $96 billion. Meanwhile, in our institutional drawdown area, our business is accelerating with a new fundraising cycle underway. We have held initial closings of $5 billion for our new PE secondaries flagship, targeting at least the size of the prior $22 billion vintage, with another major close expected in the coming weeks. Our secondaries platform saw a record year of deployment in 2025, and we see strong growth ahead fueled by the ongoing expansion of private markets. In corporate private equity, we have raised over $10 billion to date for our next Asia flagship, compared to approximately $6 billion for the previous vintage, and expect to reach over $12 billion. We also launched fundraising for our fifth private equity energy transition vehicle, which we expect to be meaningfully larger than the prior vintage of approximately $5.5 billion, with a first close anticipated this spring. Rising demand in the power and electrification ecosystem is creating enormous deal flow in this area, and our currently investing vintage is approximately 80% committed only a year and a half after launch. In Q4, we also held closings for the new vintages of our tactical opportunities, GP stakes, and life sciences vehicles. And in credit, we raised additional capital for our fifth opportunistic strategy, bringing it to over $7 billion with a target of $10 billion. There is no question that institutional investors remain the bedrock of our firm. Diving deeper into credit specifically, our platform overall continues to see extraordinary momentum. We now manage $520 billion of total assets across corporate and real estate credit, up 15% year over year. Inflows exceeded $140 billion in 2025, with strong fundraising across the institutional, insurance, and private wealth channels. Underpinning this demand, again, is investment performance. Our non-investment grade strategies in private credit and real estate credit delivered gross performance of 11% and 17% respectively for the year. Since inception twenty years ago, our non-investment grade private credit strategies have generated 10% net returns annually, double the return of the leveraged loan market with minimal losses. Despite the external noise today in private credit, facts do matter, and our portfolio overall is in excellent shape, including high single-digit EBITDA growth on average for our direct lending borrowers for the most recent annual period. The backdrop remains favorable with corporate profits growing, short-term rates declining, and transaction activity increasing. At the same time, we are benefiting from the massive secular shift underway towards investment-grade private credit, which we believe is in the earliest stages. We now manage $130 billion in this area, up 30% year over year. Our farm-to-table approach, which brings clients directly to borrowers and is designed to create a structural premium to liquid fixed income, is really resonating. Why is investment-grade private credit growing so quickly? Two main reasons. First, corporate investment-grade bond spreads are at their tightest level since 1998. We have been seeing insurers and now some pensions and sovereign wealth funds looking to earn materially higher spreads at the same or lower risk level. Second, the build-out of AI infrastructure requires a massive amount of private debt capital for the construction of fabs, energy supply, and data centers. Turning to the insurance channel specifically, our AUM grew 18% year over year to $271 billion. This remarkable growth is happening without taking on any insurance liability. Investors are responding particularly well to our open architecture model and the value we deliver. We placed or originated $50 billion credits for our private IG-focused clients in 2025, which generated approximately 180 basis points of incremental spread versus comparably rated liquid credits. These results are more important than ever in an environment of tightening yields. Moving to the individual investor channel where we are uniquely positioned given the breadth of our product lineup, our performance, and the power of our brand. Our AUM in private wealth grew 16% year over year to more than $300 billion and is up threefold in the past five years. In Q4, our total sales in the channel exceeded $11 billion, up 50% year over year. BCRED led the way with gross sales of $3.3 billion, while net inflows were $1.2 billion. For the full year, BCRED reported record gross sales of over $14 billion, powered by investment performance, with 10% net returns annually since inception five years ago, almost entirely comprised of current income. Our private equity flagship in this channel, BXP, has also generated outstanding performance, achieving an annualized net return of 17% since inception. BXP has grown to $18 billion in only two years, with its broad-based approach to our expansive private equity platform. Our infrastructure strategy in private wealth, BX Infra, is approximately $4 billion only one year after launch, with strong performance out of the gates. And BREIT delivered terrific results in 2025, underpinned by a net return of 8.1% for its largest share class, nearly three times the public REIT index. BREIT's portfolio position continues to drive returns, including its significant exposure to data centers. In private wealth, as with the rest of Blackstone Inc., our relentless focus on investment performance gives us the license to innovate. And our innovation is accelerating. We expect 2026 to be our busiest year yet in terms of product launches, as we stated previously. Blackstone Inc. has led the evolution of the private wealth market to date, and we expect to lead it in the future. Turning to real estate, where we have been navigating the early stages of the sector's recovery. We said the cycle was bottoming two years ago, but that the recovery would not be a straight line. Since then, US private real estate values have been slowly improving. However, since the interest rate cycle began approximately four years ago, real estate values are still down 16% compared to an increase of 75% for the S&P 500. We think real estate has plenty of room to run. We have taken advantage of choppy investor sentiment to lean into deployment, investing or committing over $50 billion in real estate since the cycle trough two years ago, including our commitment in Q4 to privatize Alexander and Baldwin, an owner of high-quality grocery-anchored shopping centers and warehouses in Hawaii. The gradual pace of the recovery today has meant our real estate funds in aggregate saw limited appreciation in 2025, notwithstanding BREIT's strong performance. That said, we do see a number of positive signs which point to a better year ahead. These include the sharp decline in construction starts, which have fallen to the lowest level in more than twelve years in the US, in both logistics and multifamily, our two largest sectors in real estate. Continued growth in debt availability and declines in the cost of debt, a pickup in transaction activity, and now an improvement in logistics demand with our US platform reporting record leasing activity in Q4. At the same time, our exposure to data centers continues to be a source of strength, as does real estate credit. We remain highly optimistic about the direction of travel for our real estate business. In closing, we enter 2026 with tremendous momentum. Our clients are growing their commitments to us across channels. We are actively investing that capital in compelling thematic areas, and realizations have begun to accelerate. Blackstone Inc.'s performance-driven, capital-light, brand-heavy model continues to deliver for shareholders. And with that, I will turn things over to Michael.