Thanks, Mark, and thanks to everybody for joining us today. I'm going to provide a quick update on our performance, and then we'll begin the Q&A session. So overall, we had a good first quarter with same-store revenue growth that exceeded our expectations. The stronger performance was driven by better physical occupancy at 96.5% across the portfolio and resident turnover of only 7.9%, which set the record for the lowest that we have ever reported. This is a continuation of a very favorable prior trend and supports the strength of our centralized renewal process and intense focus on delivering our residents a quality experience. In addition, blended rate growth of 1.8% in the quarter came in right at the midpoint of our expected range. We saw strength in New York and Washington, D.C. as well as continued improvement in our West Coast markets of Seattle and San Francisco. All of this positions us well to take advantage of the opportunities that the primary leasing season brings. In times of heightened uncertainty, as we see currently, we remind our teams to keep their eyes on their operating dashboards, tracking demand, leasing velocity and pricing power, all of which are blinking green currently and look in line to slightly ahead of our expectations. We also keep a close eye on job growth expectations and level of new supply in our markets. And as we sit here today, the job numbers to date have been solid, but we acknowledge less certainty in the future job growth projections. But what is clear is that we are getting even more positive on less impact from future supply as we expect the current environment to even further reduce the number of apartment starts this year as capital allocators hesitate to make big outlays in turbulent times. In addition, the financial health of our residents remained strong. In fact, the average household income of the residents who rented with us in the last 12 months is up from the prior year period, and the average rent-to-income ratios remain very favorable at 20%. Our centralized processes and system transparency provides us with a powerful and immediate feedback loop to any potential shifts in conditions on the ground in our markets. As of today, we are not seeing any signs of consumer weakness, which typically shows up and increases the number of lease breaks, unit transfers to lower rent units, increases in delinquencies or a slowing percent of residents renewing their leases with us. I'm not going to go around the horn to all markets, but I will highlight a few that have likely been on people's minds. First, to our nation's capital. There have been a lot of questions on what the impact from government job layoffs in the market will look like. And as of now, we are not seeing an impact. I recently spent a few days in the market, touring our assets in D.C. and Northern Virginia. Right now, we are over 97% occupied in the market and producing good rent growth. There are a few stories of residents expressing concern due to job loss but nothing at the moment that is impacting any of our stats, results or projections for the next 90 days in the market. Although I would remind you that we would be a lagging indicator, not a leading one. I can also tell you that we have seen some inbound inquiries from a few West Coast residents needing to relocate to the D.C. market now that the in-office work is required by the government. It is also important to note that in the past, we have seen situations, for example, in Seattle and San Francisco, that experienced layoffs with extended severance periods. And the result was more about a slowing of rent growth than any kind of increase in lease breaks, delinquency or move-outs. In terms of supply, the D.C. market is expected to deliver another 12,000 units this year with a material drop-off projected in 2026. After seeing the peak in the third quarter of 2024, it is clear that our portfolio will see -- or continue to see less direct supply throughout 2025 and '26. On the West Coast, Los Angeles is a bit of a mixed bag. I was just in the market several weeks ago, and while we have been able to build physical occupancy sequentially and turnover has improved, pricing power remains somewhat elusive. Performance is much stronger in the suburban submarkets of Santa Clarita and Ventura County than the more urban infill locations with little overall operating impacts from the wildfires earlier this year. We believe that the slow pace of recovery in the entertainment business, along with some quality-of-life issues, are contributing to this performance. We are hoping that recent increases in tax subsidies will lure more entertainment production and resident demand back to the market. Now to the tech centers of San Francisco and Seattle. San Francisco is showing the improvement that we talked about at our recent Investor Day with portfolio-wide occupancy running above 97%. Turnover declined in the quarter, and although concessions continue to be common in the market, we are seeing opportunities to increase base rents at a pace that is better than we expected. The downtown submarket is demonstrating strong momentum with very stable high occupancy and concessions declining pretty steadily all year so far, both in the percent of applications and dollar amounts being given. And those declines are on top of the increases we are also seeing in base rent, which combined is fueling our net effective prices in the marketplace. We like what we see from the new mayor and his focus on improving quality of life and promoting local businesses. Tech employment seems stable with more employers pushing a more robust return-to-office policy. And most of the supply will be delivered in the Peninsula and South Bay, which have been among the better-performing submarkets for a while. There will be no new supply downtown, which should benefit our portfolio there. Seattle also continues to show signs of improvement. The return to office from Amazon has been a positive for the market. Occupancy is at 96.5%, and we saw good rental rate growth in the quarter. Tech employment seemed stable in this market as well. And while we are seeing an impact from new supply in both the Downtown and Redmond submarkets, we expect that impact to lessen materially as the year progresses. Turning to our expansion markets in the first quarter. Atlanta, Dallas and Austin performed pretty much as we expected given the challenging operating conditions due to the level of competitive new supply impacting our same-store assets. Denver's overall demand felt a little weaker than we would have expected in the quarter, which resulted in less pricing power. As we sit here today, overall, demand across all four markets is showing seasonal improvement heading into the peak leasing season. That being said, concessions are in wide use in these markets, and we continue to have muted expectation for the first half of the year. Switching to innovation and automation updates, which we provided details on at our recent Investor Day. We are in the process of expanding the deployment of our conversational AI capabilities across the entire leasing journey. This, along with the broader strategic automation initiative, is designed to reduce manual tasks, accelerate leasing cycles, minimize errors and ultimately improve our overall efficiency and scalability, all while improving the overall prospect experience. By this time next year, we expect the process from the initial inquiry, the lease signing to be almost entirely automating, giving our customers more self-service and the ability to work with our teams as much or as little as they choose. We are very pleased with the momentum we have on the various initiatives relating to both other income generation as well as operating efficiencies and improved customer experiences. As we think about the second quarter, we expect to continue to see a sequential build in new lease change and strong, stable performance in terms of retention, achieve renewal rate increases and occupancy. We have an expectation for blended rate growth of 2.8% to 3.4% in the second quarter and feel really well positioned as we enter the primary leasing season despite the overall economic ambiguity. Our operational agility and strategic focus will ensure that we are not only able to navigate any potential near-term economic headwinds but are poised to capitalize on future opportunities to deliver sustained value. At this time, I will turn the call over to the operator to begin the Q&A session.