Thanks, and good morning. As Paul said, Enerpac enjoyed solid growth on the top and bottom line in fiscal 2023. Core revenue, which excludes divestitures and the impact of foreign exchange, expanded 8% from fiscal 2022. On a core basis, product revenues expanded 12% year-over-year. At the same time, service revenue declined 7%, due to the previously discussed implementation of a more selective quoting process, particularly in the Middle East region. We anticipate we will see this impact for another two quarters as we began implementing this process in the back half of fiscal 2023. Within the Industrial Tools & Service segment, three of our four geographic regions, Americas, Asia Pacific, and ESSA, which includes Europe, Sub-Saharan Africa and India, generated double-digit growth in fiscal '23. As for the MENAC region, which includes the Middle East, North Africa and Caspian, revenue declined in the mid-teens as expected as a result of the just mentioned selective exit from certain projects in our service business. The ESSA region enjoyed healthy demand from wind, rail, and infrastructure. However, dealer sentiment is neutral to cautious. In Asia Pacific, dealer sentiment is most positive in Australia, driven by demand from the mining industry. Other positives include infrastructure spending in Japan and shipbuilding in Korea and Japan, somewhat offset by softness from China's steel mills and manufacturing sectors. Overall channel inventory is appropriate. In the Americas, sales growth was broad-based, with particular strength in infrastructure and wind markets. Channel inventory is stable. However, our dealers have expressed some caution with a slowdown in the rate of growth due to general economic conditions. In the MENAC region, investment in oil and gas and renewable energy projects remain strong. Overall dealer sentiment is neutral and inventory is appropriate. We know these acronyms for our regions are mouthful. They have also added an unnecessary layer in terms of how we manage the company from a commercial perspective. Beginning in fiscal '24, we streamlined our geographic reporting and consolidated it into three regions: Americas; EMEA, which includes Europe, Middle East and Africa; and Asia Pacific. As we mentioned last quarter, we welcomed Phil Jefferson to lead our new EMEA region. Phil joins us with an extensive background leading industrial businesses including senior roles at Motorola Solutions and most recently, Honeywell International. We are pleased to have him on Board. As you can see on Slide 7, showing the 2020 to 2023 period, we have consistently grown revenue and greatly improved profitability. In fiscal '23, gross margins expanded to 49.3% from 46.5% in fiscal 2022, an increase of 280 basis points. This was driven in part by the success of our Lean initiatives and our continued focus on operational excellence. We are excited about the operational improvement plans we have in place and the broad operations team engaged to lead and implement them. Similarly, our initiatives to improve operational efficiency and productivity in SG&A prove beneficial. Adjusted SG&A expense, which excludes ASCEND and other onetime charges for both periods, improved 550 basis points to 28.2%. Our goal is to further improve the efficiency of our SG&A spend as a percentage of sales, and over time, bring us in line with best-in-class industrials. For fiscal '23, adjusted EBITDA was $136 million, an increase of 65% year-over-year. With that, adjusted EBITDA margins expanded from 14.5% in fiscal 2022, to 22.8% in fiscal '23. Diluted earnings per share from continuing operations totaled $0.94 in fiscal '23, up from $0.33 in fiscal '22. Adjusted earnings per share increased approximately 80% to $1.45 compared to $0.81 in the year ago period. For the year, we generated free cash flow of $70 million, driven by strong EBITDA growth and working capital improvements, partially offset by onetime ASCEND costs. This is a substantial increase over fiscal '22's free cash flow of $44 million. Regarding the fourth quarter of fiscal '23, total reported revenue increased 6% while core revenue expanded 9% over prior year. We continued to improve profitability with an adjusted EBITDA margin of 24.9% in the fourth quarter of fiscal '23, up from 20.1% in the year ago period. While we expect to continue to enhance profitability towards our goal of 25% as we exit fiscal '24, keep in mind that there is some seasonality as higher volume in the back half of the fiscal year typically translates to higher margins. As we have discussed, our strong liquidity and balance sheet support our capital allocation priorities, including, internal investments to drive our organic growth, also to execute on our ASCEND transformation program, along with opportunistic share repurchases and the capacity to pursue strategic acquisitions. At year-end fiscal '23, our leverage was 0.6x adjusted EBITDA, remaining well below our target range of 1.5x to 2.5x and providing ample liquidity to pursue meaningful capital deployment. During fiscal '23, we repurchased 2.2 million shares, returning $58 million to shareholders. There are 4 million shares remaining under the current authorization. As noted in our press release in July, we completed the sale of the Cortland Industrial business, further sharpening Enerpac's pure-play focus. For modeling purposes, Cortland Industrial contributed approximately $23 million to revenue in fiscal '23 with minimal impact on EBITDA. Looking ahead, our guidance for fiscal 2024 reflects a fair degree of caution given the continued uncertainty in the macro environment. Entering the first quarter of fiscal '24, orders declined in September but rebounded thus far in October, leaving us about flat year-over-year through the first half of the quarter. With that in mind, we anticipate net sales of $590 million to $605 million with underlying core growth of approximately 2% to 4%. For the year, we expect growth in both product and service revenues. As a note, when we talk about core growth in fiscal '24, we've deducted revenues from the divested Cortland Industrial business from the baseline for a true apples-to-apples comparison. Longer term, we continue to target the goals we laid out at our Investor Day in November 2022, with a 6% to 7% organic revenue CAGR over the planning horizon through fiscal 2026. We are forecasting adjusted EBITDA of $142 million to $152 million. And at the midpoint, that represents a year-over-year growth of 8%, with a full year adjusted EBITDA margin of 24.6%. We expect to generate relatively flat free cash flow of $60 million to $70 million in fiscal '24. CapEx is expected to be higher with investments in the range of $12 million to $17 million compared to $9.4 million in fiscal 2023, as we invest in manufacturing equipment upgrades and automation to support our continued growth and efficiency enhancements. In addition, cash taxes are expected to increase to normal levels, partially offset by lower ASCEND-related costs. Excluding onetime charges associated with the ASCEND program and discontinued operations, fiscal '24 free cash flow conversion would be approximately 100%. As you can see from this slide, we have included our modeling assumptions including interest expense, depreciation and amortization, along with adjusted tax rate. As Paul said, we effectively achieved the vast majority of our targeted benefit from ASCEND in fiscal 2023. Going forward, as we transition to a continuous improvement program, which leverages all the rigor and processes from ASCEND, we will no longer break out ASCEND's specific benefits. As per the expense out of ASCEND, since the inception of the program, we have booked expenses totaling approximately $60 million. That leaves us with $10 million to $15 million remaining in anticipated spend in fiscal 2024, which includes $3 million to $5 million of restructuring charges. With that, let me turn the call back to Paul.