Thanks, Toby. I'll start with the highlights of our fourth quarter results. First, we delivered sales volumes of 605 Bcfe at the high-end of guidance, driven by operational momentum that Toby discussed. Normalized for curtailment, production would have come in at approximately 632 Bcfe or 6.9 Bcfe per day, a tangible demonstration of our operational momentum. While on the topic of production, it is worth noting that we experienced less than 1 Bcf of freeze-offs during the polar Vortex events last month, compared with 13 Bcf during Winter Storm Elliot in 2022. Greater alignment and collaboration with our new midstream colleagues drove the step change improvement in performance. Turning to pricing, our differential came in $0.13 tighter than the midpoint of our guidance range as we curtailed volumes early in the quarter during the weakest periods of local pricing before surging volumes back when pricing strengthened. This is the second consecutive quarter of material realized pricing outperformance due to tactical curtailments, underscoring how our curtailment strategy creates shareholder value without disrupting operations or impairing productive capacity in a volatile market. To further demonstrate the value of this strategy, amid cold winter weather and strong local pricing in January, we opened up chokes on many of our wells, providing customers additional volume to meet winter demand while simultaneously exposing more production to high local pricing. Year-to-date in 2025, we've realized $20 million of revenue uplift from this strategy while delivering record levels of company production. Fourth quarter operating costs came in at $1.07 per Mcfe at the low-end of our guidance range due to production outperformance and gathering LOE and G&A expenses below expectations, CapEx of $583 million with 7% below the low-end of our guidance range due to efficiency gains and lower midstream spending. It's worth nothing that aggregate capital expenditures during the second half of 2024 came in nearly $200 million below the midpoint of our expectations, again, tangibly highlighting our capital efficiency momentum. On the midstream side, third-party pipeline revenue was $166 million, 7% above the high-end of guidance. MVP capital contributions of $60 million were 14% below the low-end of guidance, and MVP distributions of $53 million were in line with expectations. EQT generated $756 million of net cash provided by operating activities and $588 million of free cash flow during the fourth quarter, despite Henry Hub averaging just $2.81 per MMBtu, underscoring the unparalleled nature of our low-cost business model during all parts of the commodity cycle. Turning to the balance sheet, during the fourth quarter, we delivered on our asset sale promises a year ahead of schedule to de-risk our balance sheet and position our hedge book for a rising price environment. In December, we closed on the sale of our remaining non-operated Northeast Pennsylvania assets and Midstream Joint Venture. Proceeds from these transactions totaled $4.7 billion, which we used to fully repay our term loan, fund the repayment of senior notes, and pay down our credit facility. We exited 2024 with $9.3 billion of total debt and $9.1 billion of net debt compared to $13.8 billion and $13.7 billion, respectively, at the end of the third quarter. It's worth noting that our net debt at year-end reflects the impact of $475 million of working capital usage during the quarter, the bulk of which should reverse in 2025. At strip pricing, we expect to exit 2025 with net debt of approximately $7 billion, comfortably below our target of $7.5 billion. In the medium-term, we plan to reduce our absolutely debt balance toward $5 billion to bulletproof our balance sheet and credit ratings, so that we can play offense during the next down cycle when others are forced to play defense. For reference, this debt balance equates to approximately five times free cash flow at a $2.75 Henry Hub price, which is a price point where many of our peers are free cash flow neutral to negative. Turning to hedging, our rapid asset sale execution and bullish outlook for pricing in 2025 and 2026 positioned us to add no incremental hedges during this quarter. To recall, we tactically sculpted our hedge book to have material upside to improving macro conditions later this year. Our hedge percentage falls to approximately 40% in Q4, with 100% of our hedges becoming white collars with ceilings of $5.50 per MMBtu in November. We remain unhedged in 2026 and beyond, providing investors full exposure to an increasingly bullish setup for prices. Our position at the low-end of the cost curve acts as a structural hedge, which in turn facilitates unmatched exposure to high-price scenarios by limiting our need to financially hedge. As previously communicated, we plan to approach future hedging patiently and opportunistically in order to capture asymmetric skew in the options market. In essence, this approach positions us to monetize volatility and realize higher-than-average gas prices through the cycle. Turning to the macro landscape, three years of low commodity prices resulted in upstream underinvestment. This supply backdrop, combined with an unusually cold winter, ramping LNG exports and robust power demand, has catalyzed an inflection in natural gas prices over the past quarter. While gas prices have already surged, we think there is still room to run and cannot recall as wide of a disconnect between the equity and commodity markets as we are observing today. The Haynesville is suffering from years of underinvestment and increasingly scarce inventory debt. And we believe will be much slower to respond than the commodity markets or pricing. Appalachia is largely pipeline constrained and there are no new pipelines out of the Permian until late 2026. Simply put, it will take too long to increase gas production to meet this step change increase in demand during such a short time. And we believe the market may have to balance inventories through demand destruction at the hands of higher prices in 2025 and 2026. Looking further ahead, we are eyes wide open at nearly 5 Bcf per day of new Permian gas pipeline or slated for completion in late 2026, just before Qatar brings 6 Bcf per day at the LNG onto the global market. With these medium-term headwinds and the fact that capital spending would not result in additional production until mid-2026, we do not have plans to invest in production growth this year and view the coming inventory imbalance and higher prices as a phenomenon of the timing mismatch of supply and demand, amplified by a cold winter and the theme of too little gas storage capacity. Alongside a broader bullish backdrop for natural gas, the underlying fundamentals in Appalachia continue to strengthen, with the tightening base as one of the most underappreciated themes. Robust demand in the southeast region has driven MVP flows to maximum capacity of 2 Bcf per day this winter, contributing to eastern storage levels moving from near five-year highs last fall to near five-year lows today. As a result, our production sold into the local M2 market and our MVP volumes sold at Station 165 have received robust pricing. During the January cold spell, Station 165 spread to Appalachian price points rose to more than $25 per MMBtu, underscoring the tremendous upside option value embedded in our MBT capacity during periods of high demand. Longer term, we continue to see 6 to 7 Bcf per day of incremental Appalachian demand by 2030, driven by load growth, coal retirement, and pipeline expansions. At the same time, we believe many producers in Appalachia will see productivity degradation or run out of inventory entirely, further tightening local fundamentals. M2 base's futures are beginning to reflect this reality, tightening by approximately $0.30 between 2026 to 2030 over the past two years. EQT is uniquely positioned to capitalize on this setup, as we have the highest quality and longest duration inventory in the basin, paired with irreplicable, world-class infrastructure. These characteristics are investment grade credit ratings and low emissions credentials make EQT the go-to company for new power projects and position the business for sustainable future production growth. Turning to capital allocation, in recent strip pricing, we expect to generate approximately $2.6 billion of free cash flow in 2025, which we plan to allocate toward debt repayment. With our balance sheet de-risked, we plan to steadily and sustainably grow our base dividends over the years ahead and position to opportunistically repurchase shares when the market is fearful. Beyond 2025, our integrated business is ideally situated to support appellation demand growth, positioning EQT to provide sustainable, low-risk organic growth for shareholders, a key attribute missing from the industry today. We are in the process of generating a backlog of low risk, high return midstream investments to support this demand growth, which would in turn unlock modest upstream production growth from our decades of high quality inventory. We have uniquely positioned EQT among the energy landscape, offering investors not only the best risk adjusted exposure to natural gas, but also idiosyncratic growth opportunities that should allow us to compound capital and create differentiated value over the long-term. And with that, I will turn it back over to Toby for concluding remarks.