Thanks, Anne, and good morning, everyone. Within the investment landscape, we expect apartment demand and economic growth to remain resilient in 2025. When coupled with the downward trend of new supply additions this year, it bodes well for continued strengthening of underlying fundamentals. In our two largest markets of Minneapolis and Denver, we are past peak deliveries, so recent supply impacts will affect the cadence of absorption and forecasted rent growth this year. In Minneapolis, delivery peaked earlier when compared to Denver, where high watermark deliveries were concentrated in the second half of 2024. Given this, we expect to see relative fundamentals improvement sooner in Minneapolis, with Denver positioning itself for more defined tailwinds in 2025. In both Minneapolis and Denver, next twelve-month deliveries are forecasted at 1.4% and 2.5% of existing apartment stock respectively, further highlighting the tapering supply profile. Transaction volumes in our markets improved in 2024, though remain below 2021 and 2022 levels. There is a lot of capital looking for multifamily investments right now. However, real-time transaction velocity is muted, driven by continued interest rate volatility and the bid-ask spread. For instance, recent Mountain West core asset sales that priced at mid to high 4% cap rates inform asset owners' perspectives and, coupled with their belief in improving fundamentals over the coming twelve to eighteen months, lead to a general lack of real-time transaction velocity. On the capital allocation front, we will remain focused this year on enhancing our differentiated Mountain West and Midwest geography. We continue evaluating a variety of new investment possibilities to grow the company and advance our strategic plan while being mindful of our cost of capital. This could include potential operating partnership unit transactions, acquisitions where we can obtain attractive financing, and mezzanine lending pursuits. All areas where we have recently been active. Regarding mezzanine capital funding, we have one small funding outstanding today on a new construction community in Minneapolis. That project remains on track both from a timeline and budget perspective. And with that, I'll turn it over to Bhairav to discuss our overall financial results for 2024 and outlook for 2025. Thanks, Grant. Good morning, everyone. Last night, we reported core FFO of $1.21 per diluted share for the fourth quarter, driven by a 2.1% year-over-year increase in same-store NOI. Revenues from same-store communities increased by 3.1% compared to the same quarter of 2023, driven by a 2.3% increase in revenue per occupied home and a 70 basis point year-over-year increase in weighted average occupancy, which stood at 95.5% for the quarter. Same-store expenses were up by 4.6% year-over-year, driven by higher controllable expenses, with repairs and maintenance as the largest driver of the increase. Conversely, non-controllable expenses were down 350 basis points, driven in particular by real estate tax refunds received during the quarter. Turning to guidance, we introduced our 2025 expectations in last night's press release. For the year, we expect core FFO of $4.98 at the midpoint, which would be roughly 2% growth over 2024's final results and 18 cents or 2.75% ahead of our initial guidance for last year. Guidance assumes that at their midpoint, same-store net operating income rose by 2.25%, same-store revenue rose by 2.5%, and same-store expenses grow by 3%. Revenue growth assumes blended leasing spreads of 2.4%, holding occupancy at 2024 levels. Within expenses, controllable expenses are expected to increase by 2% at the midpoint, while non-controllable expenses increased by 4.5% as we are comparing to our 2024 real estate taxes, which had several one-time benefits from REIT. The anticipated expense growth will be curtailed due to the benefits of centralization initiatives rolled out in 2024, as well as a favorable insurance renewal that saw our premiums go down by approximately 12% or almost $900,000. On other components of guidance, we expect G&A and property management expenses for the year to range between $27.9 million and $28.4 million, and interest expense to range between $38.8 million and $49 million. The year-over-year interest expense increase is primarily driven by the debt assumed in conjunction with the Lydian acquisition. On capital expenditures, we expect value-add expenditures of $16 to $18 million for the year, while we expect recurring CapEx per home to average $1,150 per unit. Our value-add spending has tapered year-over-year due to the recently softer market rents coupled with a higher cost of capital. No additional acquisitions, dispositions, issuances, or borrowing are factored into our guidance. Please note that in 2025, our same-store pool will look at two communities: The Lydian, which we acquired in 2024, and the Bosc, a community which is undergoing a full-scale repositioning and has previously been known as Woodland Point. On the capital front, I'll reiterate our progress from 2024. We sold nearly 1.6 million shares under the ATM program, raising gross proceeds of nearly $114 million, retired the Series C preferred, and improved our net debt plus preferred leverage profile by half a turn. Our debt maturity profile remains well-laddered with a weighted average debt cost of 3.6% and a weighted average time to maturity of 5.6 years. To conclude, it was a very active and productive year across the board. We achieved strong operating results, strengthened our balance sheet, simplified our capital structure, and expanded our portfolio in one of our desired markets. We look forward to building upon these results in 2025. And with that, I will turn the line back to the operator for your questions.