Thanks, Ryan. For the first quarter, we generated $422 million of revenue, $136 million of adjusted gross profit and $73 million of adjusted EBITDA. On a year-over-year basis, all our rental segment KPIs improved in the quarter. Average utilization of the rental fleet from Q1 was just under 78% compared to 73% in Q1 of the prior year. Average OEC on rent in the quarter was over $1.2 billion compared to under $1.1 billion in Q1 of 2024. Both metrics so far in Q2 are consistent with the averages we experienced in Q1, currently standing at more than $1.2 billion and approximately 78%, respectively. As of today, OEC on rent is up almost $160 million or more than 15% versus a year ago. The ERS segment had $154 million of revenue in Q1, up more than 13% from $136 million in Q1 of 2024. Both rental revenue and rental asset sales were up meaningfully on a year-over-year basis, showing 9% and 26% growth, respectively. Adjusted gross profit for ERS was $93 million for Q1, up 13% from Q1 of last year. Adjusted gross margin for ERS was 60% in the quarter, essentially flat versus the same period last year. For Q1, we maintained margins in the expected range of the low to mid-70% range for rental revenue and the mid- to high 20% range for rental asset sales. On-rent yield was over 38% for the quarter, essentially flat on a sequential quarterly basis. Net rental CapEx in Q1 was $60 million, and our fleet age improved slightly to 3.1 years. Our OEC in the rental fleet ended the quarter at $1.55 billion, up $95 million versus the end of Q1 2024 and up $33 million in the quarter, reflecting our strategic investment in the rental fleet given the strong demand environment we continue to experience across our primary end markets. We expect to continue to invest in the fleet this year and expect to grow our OEC by mid-single digits percentage versus the end of 2024. As we always do, we will adjust our CapEx plans throughout the year to reflect our customers' demand to both rent equipment and purchase used equipment out of our fleet. In the TES segment, we sold $232 million of equipment in Q1, down marginally compared to Q1 of the previous year. However, as Ryan mentioned, we saw double-digit sequential growth in February and March, and we ended the quarter with our highest level of equipment sales for March ever. Gross margin in the segment in Q1 was 15.1%, down from Q1 2024, but in line with our expected margin range for the segment of 15% to 18%. TES gross margin continues to be impacted by mix and improved inventory levels across the broader industry. We do expect TES gross margins to improve later this year. TES new sales backlog increased by $51 million or 14% in the quarter, ending at just over $420 million. At just under 5 months of LTM TES sales, our TES backlog is within our targeted historical average of 4 to 6 months. Net orders improved to $284 million in Q1, a sequential improvement and up more than 220% compared to Q1 of 2024. We continued to see strong sales and order flow so far in Q2 with record April sales consistent with March levels and continued growth in our backlog since the end of Q1. That, combined with ongoing feedback from our customers regarding their equipment needs for 2025, provide us with confidence that we will see the expected revenue growth in TES this year. Our strong and long-standing relationships with our chassis, body and attachment vendors continue to be an important driver of TES production. Our current level of inventory positions us well to meet our production, fleet growth and sales goals for the year as well as help mitigate the impact of new tariffs. Our ATS business posted revenue of $35 million in the quarter, flat compared to Q1 of the previous year. Adjusted gross profit margin in the segment was 22% for Q1, down compared to Q1 2024, mainly as a result of continued higher cost of materials, product mix and lower third-party service work in the quarter. Borrowings under our ABL at the end of Q1 were $655 million, an increase of $73 million versus the end of Q4. Largely to fund the approximately $33 million purchase of the ECP shares in January as well as for increased rental equipment CapEx and certain other working capital needs. As of the end of Q1, we had $290 million available and over $161 million of suppressed availability under the ABL. With LTM adjusted EBITDA of $336 million, we finished Q1 with net leverage of 4.8x. Despite the tactical pull forward of some of our inventory purchases into Q1, we expect to reduce our inventory by the end of the year, which should contribute to lower balances on our floor plan lines as well as reduced borrowings on the ABL. We intend to use our levered free cash flow this year to reduce our net leverage and continue to target a level of below 3x. This remains a primary and important goal for us and the one that we expect to achieve by the end of fiscal 2026. We are reiterating our previous 2025 guidance with total revenue in the range of $1.97 billion to $2.06 billion, adjusted EBITDA in the range of $370 million to $390 million and net rental CapEx of just under $200 million. Our segment guidance also remains unchanged. We continue to expect to generate meaningful levered free cash flow in 2025, setting a target of $50 million to $100 million and to deliver a meaningful reduction in our net leverage by the end of the fiscal year. In closing, I want to echo Ryan's comments regarding our continued strong business outlook. Despite the impact of the changing U.S. tariff policy has had on the markets, we continue to be optimistic about the long-term demand drivers in our industry and our ability to return to double-digit adjusted EBITDA growth this year. With that, I will turn it over to the operator to open the lines for questions. Operator?