Thank you, Shane. Today, I will talk about our third quarter operational results and outlook. We'll provide a business unit update, including the successful integration and upside to our Franklin Mountain and Avant acquisitions, and I will briefly touch on our marketing efforts. The third quarter was another well-executed quarter, and we carried this operational momentum into the fourth quarter. On the activity front, we have a consistent 9-rig, 3-crew program working in the Permian, 1 rig and 1 crew in the Marcellus and 1 rig in the Anadarko. We expect to maintain this activity level during the fourth quarter. To reiterate what Shane touched on earlier, looking ahead to 2026, we expect 2026 capital to be down modestly year-over-year, while still achieving the production ranges laid out in our 2025 through 2027 3-year outlook. While we are focused on consistent operations through the commodity cycles, we are maintaining maximum operational flexibility with no rigs or frac crews on long-term contracts. We expect to provide a comprehensive 2026 guidance and an updated 3-year outlook in February. The integration of our Franklin Mountain and Avant assets is complete, and our teams continue to outperform our expectations for synergies on these assets. I would like to spend a few minutes discussing our progress. When we announced the acquisition, there were many wells that were in various stages of development, and we made estimates of their productivity for our evaluation and for our full year production guidance. In November 2024, we announced a 2025 production estimate for the assets of 40,000 to 50,000 barrels of oil per day, assuming a full year contribution. When we updated our production guidance on our February call after the actual close dates in late January of the assets were known, we maintained our annual production guidance because we liked how the assets were performing. I am pleased to report that we continue to perform in line to above our production expectation for the acquired assets, giving us further confidence that there is upside relative to what was underpinned -- what underpinned the acquisition. On the capital side of the acquisition, we have realized a 10% reduction in our total well costs as measured in dollars per foot by applying our Coterra best practices at scale across the assets. A few of the efficiencies I would like to point out are our optimized and standardized hole size and casing designs, which have reduced our drilling times from 15 to 13 days for a standard 2-mile lateral. And on the completion front, we have seen that implementing our proven stimulation designs that have been evaluated across the basin and tailored for each landing zone as well as our scale in the Permian has allowed us to reduce service costs. In addition to capital savings, we now have line of sight to significant operating cost synergies. We have already reduced the inherited lease operating expense by approximately 5% or $8 million per year. These savings have been seen across most services, but the biggest savings are related to on-pad sour gas treating and electric generation. For example, at our Eagle central tank battery, we acquired a facility that treated sour gas to then be burned in gas turbines to generate power for our field. Working with our marketing team, we accelerated a residue gas connection to the site that allowed us to remove the gas-treating equipment and allow the turbines to burn clean low Btu gas, increasing reliability and saving over $2.5 million per year in expenses. There are many more projects like this one, and we are currently projecting an additional $20 million per year in net operating cost savings related to on-pad sour treatment, taking our projected total LOE savings on the acquired assets to 15% as a go-forward run rate. In addition, we believe that the biggest future savings could come from using microgrids instead of well-site generators to power our assets. We are in the final stages of planning for up to 3 microgrids across our Northern Delaware Basin assets. We think that these projects will have the potential to reduce our current power costs by 50%, saving an additional $25 million a year. But as the asset and our power demand in the area grows, the projected savings will grow as well to nearly $50 million per year. This is all while we continue to work with our utility power providers to bring more grid power into the Permian Basin. Now that we have integrated the assets, we expect not only to demonstrate capital and expense reduction, but also productivity enhancements as we pursue a development plan focused on maximizing capital efficiency. Our subsurface teams have continued to delineate multiple landing zones, and this work has given us confidence that we have 10% more inventory as measured by net lateral footage than we estimated when acquiring the assets. Furthermore, our increased scale in the Northern Delaware Basin has enabled us to make many value-added trades and small-scale acquisitions. We expect our team to prudently add valuable inventory as we continue to develop our highly profitable and low-cost resources in the Permian Basin. Moving on to the Marcellus business unit. This quarter, we drilled a new 4-mile lateral from spud to rig release in under 9 days, averaging 2,400 feet per day. This sets a new high watermark for Coterra. In fact, it's becoming common for many of our recent wells to eclipse 2,000 feet per day. This type of performance and longer laterals reaching over 20,000 feet have driven drilling costs down 24% year-over-year. With these efficiencies, we no longer need 2 rigs to maintain production in our Marcellus asset. Our maintenance activity level over the next few years would require 1 to 2 rigs, so we will manage our rig count to not build excessive DUC backlog. While we hold the option to grow our Marcellus natural gas volumes, we are committed to being patient and expect to hold our production volumes relatively flat until additional demand materializes and the strip solidifies. Should we have a cold winter and prices increased into '26, we will fully participate from our approximately 2 Bcf a day of production in the Northeast and expect to generate substantial free cash flow from our Marcellus region. In the Anadarko business unit, we brought online our last project of the year during the third quarter, the 5 3-mile Hufnagel wells. These new wells, combined with our Roberts project from Q2, continue to drive strong region performance that has exceeded our expectations. Turning to marketing. Our team continues to be active in the hunt for more deals and partnerships that can deliver flow assurance and price uplift for our products across our diverse portfolio. As Blake mentioned last quarter, the long-term gas sales to CPV's new Basin Ranch power plant in Reeves County, Texas was the latest in a line of deals that our company has a history of delivering. As Tom mentioned, our Moxie and Lackawanna power deals in the Marcellus were put in place 10 years ago and have provided value well and above an in-basin price. We will continue to find opportunities to improve the netback of our product and increase the value to our shareholders. A strength of our sales portfolio is a significant diversification, but we are not satisfied and we'll continue to optimize. The teams in all 3 of our regions are firing on all cylinders and have remained focused on solid execution, making decisions to maximize full-cycle returns and creating value for shareholders. With that, I'll turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A.