Thanks, Toby. Our stellar first quarter results and more than $1 billion of free cash flow generated during the quarter drove significant delevering of our balance sheet. We exited the quarter with $8.1 billion of net debt, down from $9.1 billion at year-end 2024, and $13.7 billion at the end of the third quarter. We tendered for approximately $750 million of notes during the quarter and completed a successful exchange offer for outstanding EQM midstream notes, which simplifies our balance sheet and reporting requirements moving forward. As Toby mentioned, the accretive acquisition of Olympus Energy's upstream and midstream assets accelerates our delivering plan as proforma net debt increases by 6%, while free cash flow increases by 8%, thus enhancing our debt-to-free cash flow metrics. The acquisition has an immaterial impact on our absolute debt balance as we forecast exiting the year at $7 billion of net debt on a pro forma basis. We continue to target $5 billion of net debt on a medium-term basis and at recent strip pricing, forecast achieving this goal by the middle of 2026. Turning to hedging, rapid delivering positioned us to add no incremental hedges during the quarter, and we remain unhedged in 2026 and beyond. Our position at the low end of the cost curve acts as a structural hedge, which in turn facilitates unmatched exposure to high-priced scenarios by limiting our need to financially hedge. Instead of defensively hedging, we can now patiently look for opportunities to capture asymmetric skew in the options market, which positions EQT to realize higher-than-average gas prices through the cycle. Turning to the macro, amid the risk-off sentiment sweeping through the markets, I want to share some thoughts on the natural gas macro landscape, which is positioned as a safe haven with strengthening fundamentals. We have talked for some time about the natural gas market being structurally tighter than pricing indicated due to the successive bearish events of LNG facilities going down in warm winters. Despite consensus thinking that this past winter was particularly cold, as measured by heating degree days, winter was in fact in line with the 10-year average and inventory balances have tightened rapidly. Importantly, this occurred on the eve of a step change increase in LNG demand in 2025 and 2026. On the supply side, we believe U.S. Gas production needs to exit 2025 near 108 Bcf per day and approach 114 Bcf a day by the end of 2026. Given current production levels in the 104 Bcf to 105 Bcf per day range, we need to see a rapid increase in activity levels and production or pricing will reset significantly higher to suppress demand in balanced inventories. Our assumption has been that half of this growth would come from associated gas in the Permian and half from growth in the Haynesville. However, OPEC has decided to once again defend market share and start bringing back near record level of spare capacity, sending oil prices toward the 50s at the same time the trade war broke out. At this price level, we expect to see a slowdown in Permian activity and other less economic oil basins shifting to decline. Meanwhile, in the Haynesville, we still have not seen activity pick up and believe any activity additions will be disproportionately impacted by tariff-driven inflation. Thus, we are increasingly uncertain as to where this required production growth will come from in such a short time in our increasingly bullish gas prices. On the demand side of the equation, we do not expect notable disruptions from recent macro events. As a reminder, natural gas demand is primarily driven by winter heating, power demand, industrial demand in LNG and pipeline exports and has a negligible correlation to macroeconomic demand cycles. Looking back at a worst-case scenario from 2020, industrial demand declined by less than one Bcf per day or less than 1% of total demand, and we don't believe a modest recession would have nearly the demand impact as COVID. Further, we do not expect any impact to LNG exports in the medium term due to low inventory levels in Europe and thus expect exports to flow at full capacity. We are also observing a faster-than-expected ramp-up from the new Plaquemines LNG facility, which is operating above nameplate capacity. If this outperformance continues and Golden Pass comes online before year-end in accordance with Exxon's guidance. And as recent FERC filings indicate as possible, substantially more production will be required to keep 2026 in balance. All told, we are a more bullish medium-term gas prices today than we were last quarter. During risk cost periods like we've seen recently, the market has trouble distinguishing signal from noise. However, we are convinced that when the dust settles and the fundamental picture becomes more clear, natural gas prices are positioned to move materially higher, particularly in 2026. The longer this macro and certainty remains, and the slower the activity response, the more bullish we become. To wrap it up is demonstrated through our record-breaking results. We continue to deliver on our promises, tangibly proving the power of our integrated platform and the unique earnings power of our business in all market cycles. Our ability to quickly adapt to market conditions and a capital-efficient manner, while concurrently driving operational efficiencies, is fueling outsized free cash flow generation. Looking ahead, we see a clear path for sustained momentum and continuing to create differentiated value for shareholders. With that, I'd now like to open the call to questions.