Thank you, Aaron, and good morning, everyone. I'd like to start by expressing my appreciation to our associates around the world for their hard work and to welcome the De La Rue Authentication team to Crane NXT. Starting on Slide 7, we delivered first quarter results that were in line with our expectations. Sales increased approximately 5% year-over-year, driven by OpSec and continued strong performance from International Currency. Core sales declined approximately 4%, reflecting the expected lower U.S. Currency sales related to the planned shutdown of key papermaking equipment in preparation for the new banknote series, and the expected softness in CPI's gaming end market. Adjusted segment operating profit margin of approximately 19% was driven by the impact of lower volumes and unfavorable mix in U.S. Currency and dilution from OpSec, partially offset by productivity gains. Free cash flow was impacted by the planned lower volumes and the timing of collections in both CPI and International Currency, driven by shipments which were skewed toward the end of the quarter. Based on our strong backlog and delivery schedule, we remain on track to achieve free cash flow conversion for the full year between 90% and 110%. Finally, we delivered adjusted EPS of $0.54. Moving to our segments and starting with CPI on Slide 8. Core sales declined by approximately 2%, driven by the expected lower volumes in gaming and in the vending end market, where we faced a tough comparison versus the prior year. We saw growth in the financial services and retail end markets, reflecting a slight pull-forward of demand late in the quarter to get ahead of tariffs. Adjusted operating margin decreased 190 basis points year-over-year, reflecting the lower volumes and unfavorable product mix due to gaming, partially offset by productivity gains. CPI ended the quarter with a backlog of $147 million and a book-to-bill ratio of approximately 1. Moving to Security and Authentication Technologies on Slide 9. In the first quarter, sales were up 22% compared with the prior year, including OpSec, which is performing as expected. Core sales were down approximately 8% as expected, driven by lower U.S. Currency volumes related to the planned shutdown of key papermaking equipment in support of the new bank note series. As Aaron noted earlier, the equipment upgrades were completed successfully, and we resumed normal production in April. Adjusted operating margin of approximately 7% reflects the impact of lower U.S. volumes, which led to the under absorption of manufacturing overhead. We also had dilution from OpSec of approximately 300 basis points in the quarter. Our International Currency business continues to have strong performance with a record high backlog of approximately $370 million and 5 new micro-optic wins in the quarter, putting us well on track for our full year target of 10 to 15 new denominations and giving us high confidence in achieving our sales target for this year. In the first quarter, we had several highlights in our SAT segment. At OpSec, we renewed our contract with the National Football League to provide physical product authentication on merchandise for the next 5 years. OpSec also provides antipiracy and online brand protection services to the NFL, and we are excited to continue our long-standing partnership with the league. We also completed our second sale of micro-optics technology, known as PROFOUND, to a consumer goods company in the OpSec channel. This 2-year contract includes physical authentication and a digital track and trace solution, which increases our recurring revenue. Moving to our balance sheet on Slide 10. We ended the first quarter with net leverage of 1.7x and we estimate net leverage will be approximately 2.3x at the end of the second quarter, reflecting a new term loan to fund the De La Rue Authentication transaction. Our low leverage and strong liquidity provide us with ample capacity to deploy capital for M&A. Turning to Slide 11. I would like to provide an overview of the tariff impact and our mitigation strategy. Based on the tariffs announced to date, we've sized the full year unmitigated impact to operating profit at approximately $25 million or approximately 4% of our cost of goods, which we expect to fully mitigate with pricing and other cost reduction and productivity measures. Given our global manufacturing footprint, we have an in-region, for-region supply chain strategy, which significantly minimizes the impact of tariffs and provides future resiliency. Taking a closer look at the impact by region, the largest impact is from the tariffs on China estimated at approximately $20 million. This primarily relates to CPI components, which we source from China. Our remaining exposure is approximately $5 million coming from the tariffs related to Europe and the rest of the world. To mitigate the direct impact of tariffs, we have implemented price increases and are optimizing our supply chain strategy. Additionally, we continue to execute productivity programs across the company, utilizing the Crane Business System. Our teams have shown tremendous agility and I'm proud of the work we're doing to navigate this environment. Given these actions, we do not expect the direct impact of current tariffs to have a material effect on our 2025 results. That said, we expect some pushout of buying decisions to impact CPI in the second quarter and potentially longer if the China tariffs remain in place at the current levels. For SAT, the downside demand risk is more moderate, given our diverse set of government customers and strong backlog. Moving now to Slide 12. We are updating our guidance to reflect the increased sales growth outlook in SAT based on our record high currency backlog and the addition of De La Rue Authentication. We now expect SAT sales growth to be between 19% and 21%. This reflects 5% to 7% growth in SAT, excluding De La Rue, versus our initial guidance of 3% to 5% growth, and it includes approximately $80 million to $90 million of De La Rue Authentication sales in 2025. In CPI, given the macroeconomic uncertainty, we are revising our full year sales guidance from a range of 0% to 2% to a range of negative 2% to flat, reflecting a pushout of demand for equipment, which we expect to read through in the second quarter, resulting in CPI sales of approximately flat on a sequential basis from Q1 to Q2. We now expect our full year adjusted segment operating margin to be in the range of 25.5% and 26.5%, reflecting dilution from De La Rue and our continued strong focus on price execution and productivity, which will mitigate the impact of tariffs and lower volumes in CPI. Nonoperating expenses are now expected to be approximately $54 million as we will incur approximately $10 million of additional interest expense related to borrowings for the De La Rue acquisition. Considering these factors in total, we are maintaining our full year EPS guidance range of $4 to $4.30. Now I'll turn it back to Aaron for his closing remarks.