Good morning. And thank you for joining GrafTech International Ltd.'s fourth quarter earnings call. We are operating in one of the most challenging environments the graphite electrode industry has seen in almost a decade. Marked by global overcapacity, aggressive competitor behavior, geopolitical uncertainty, and steel production trends that remain subdued in many regions. Despite these headwinds, our team continued to deliver for our customers, manage our cost structure aggressively, operate safely, and make meaningful progress on the priorities we laid out at the beginning of 2025. One of our primary objectives for the year was to continue to grow our volumes and market share and improve our geographic mix by shifting more business towards regions with stronger pricing fundamentals, particularly The United States. Our team executed the strategy effectively. On a full-year basis, we increased sales volume by 6%. As we have shared, our commercial strategy includes making deliberate decisions to walk away from volume opportunities that do not meet our margin requirements. This discipline is essential to protecting our long-term value. And we at GrafTech refuse to follow some of our competitors in the race to the bottom. While this meant that our full-year volume finished below our most recent guidance range, it was the right decision for our business and consistent with our commitment to value-focused growth, not volume for volume's sake. As it relates to our geographic mix shift, in The United States, our sales volume grew 48% for the full year, and in the fourth quarter alone, our US volume was up 83% versus the prior year. The shift towards The US, which remains the highest price region globally, helped mitigate some of the pricing pressure we experienced in other markets, as we'll speak to later. Cost management was another key area of focus for 2025, and we delivered meaningful results without compromising our commitment to quality, safety, or the environment. For the full year, we achieved an 11% reduction in our cash cost of goods sold per metric ton. This brings the cumulative reduction since 2023 to 31%, a remarkable achievement over a two-year period. Our ongoing cost management initiatives, including enhanced procurement strategies, energy efficiency improvements, and disciplined production scheduling, have been instrumental in driving these results. In addition, a key element of our strong cost performance in 2025 was the effective management of the impact of tariffs on our cost structure. Overall, our cost management efforts have created a more agile, more efficient manufacturing footprint that positions us well to control our production costs while navigating volatility in demand. These actions, combined with the effective management of our working capital and capital expenditure levels, resulted in full-year cash flow performance and a year-end liquidity position that exceeded our expectations. To that point, including cash on hand of $138 million, we ended 2025 with a liquidity position of $340 million, a level which enables us to maintain stability despite the persistence of industry-wide challenges. Lastly, we delivered on all of these objectives while achieving meaningful improvement in our safety performance. Turning to the next slide and building on this point. As you can see, our total recordable incident rate improved to 0.41 in 2025, representing our best safety performance on record. As we enter 2026, sustaining and building on this momentum must remain a critical focus. Our ultimate goal is zero injuries, and we will continue to work relentlessly towards that standard every single day. Looking back on all that was accomplished in 2025, I want to sincerely thank our entire team around the world for their remarkable efforts, resilience, and commitment during this pivotal time. Turning to the next slide. Let me provide our current thoughts on steel industry trends as context for the rest of our discussion around our performance and outlook. Global steel production outside of China was 843 million tons in 2025, up less than 1% compared to the prior year, with a global utilization rate of approximately 67% on a full-year basis in 2025. Looking at some of our key commercial regions using data recently published by the World Steel Association, for North America, steel production was up 1% in 2025 compared to the prior year, driven by 3% year-over-year growth in The United States. Conversely, in The EU, steel output in 2025 decreased 3% compared to 2024, remaining well below historical levels of steel production and utilization for that region. In fact, with 126 million tons of steel production within The EU in 2025, this represented a decline of more than 15% compared to the historical high levels of EU steel production achieved in 2021. Further, we estimate the steel utilization rates within the EU averaged just over 60% in 2025, which is well below the global average. Although the overall steel sector is still experiencing short-term challenges, as we've mentioned previously, there are indicators of a rebound in the steel market that have started to appear. Based on World Steel's most recent short-range outlook for steel demand, globally outside of China, World Steel is projecting 2026 steel demand to grow at 3.5% year-over-year. For The US, where the steel industry has experienced relative stability, World Steel is projecting a 1.8% steel demand growth in 2026. Along with this demand growth, favorable trade policies are expected to further support US steel production. In Europe, where the steel industry has been more challenged, World Steel is projecting a return in steel demand growth in the near term, forecasting demand growth of 3.2% for 2026. This reflects some of the demand drivers we've discussed in the past, including initiatives to increase infrastructure investments and defense spending, representing some of the key steel-intensive industries. In addition, provisions within the carbon border adjustment mechanism, or CBAM, implemented at the beginning of 2026, as well as new tariff protection measures that will be effective later this year, are expected to support higher levels of production in this key commercial region for GrafTech. Against this backdrop, we estimate that globally outside of China, demand for graphite electrodes will increase slightly in 2026, with all major regions expected to contribute. That said, it's not the level of electrode demand that's the key factor holding back our industry today. It's the supply side imbalance and ultimately pricing. This supply imbalance is driven by the gross overcapacity that has been built in both China and India, with Indian manufacturers expressing plans to bring additional and unneeded capacity to the market. Combined, they are flooding the markets with cheaply priced exports, which continue to distort the competitive landscape and threaten to destabilize the entire supply chain. In response, pricing behavior of other competitors has become increasingly aggressive and arguably irrational. All of this has translated into realized prices for the graphite electrode industry that have declined significantly over the past few years. For some time, we've been clear that the pricing levels are unsustainably low and not aligned with the indispensable nature of an electrode, let alone the level of investment required to maintain a stable, reliable supply of graphite electrodes for the steel industry. Further, the level of capacity rationalization that has been announced by ex-Chinese electrode producers to date has been inadequate to address the structural overcapacity issues in our industry. As a result, we saw a deterioration of competitor pricing discipline in the fourth quarter and expect that pressure to continue into 2026. This has happened even as steelmakers in The US and Europe announced price increases for finished steel products, reinforcing the disconnect between value creation in the steel industry and the pricing environment for graphite electrodes, a mission-critical consumable. Ultimately, the current market dynamics endanger the long-term viability of the graphite electrode industry. Given these realities, structural change on the supply side is long overdue. A failure to change the current course of the electrode industry will undoubtedly result in an equilibrium that will harm the steel industry for the long term. As the only pure-play graphite electrode producer outside of India and China, we remain committed to actively shifting this dynamic in order to support our customers who rely on us for quality and reliable products. To that end, let me send a clear message to all of our stakeholders. As a leader in the graphite electrode industry, GrafTech has and will continue to act decisively. In light of the prolonged downturn in the market environment, management, with the support of our Board, continues the evaluation of a number of areas, including optimizing our manufacturing footprint, opportunities for trade or policy-making support on a number of fronts, as well as other potential strategic partnerships and sources of capital. The focus of these efforts is to identify opportunities to enhance efficiency, preserve optionality, and position GrafTech for long-term value creation. With that, I'm going to turn the call over to Rory, who will provide some more color on our commercial and financial performance for the fourth quarter. I'll then wrap up our prepared remarks with further comments on our outlook, after which we'll take your questions.