Thanks, Toby. Our strong financial results and free cash flow outperformance left our balance sheet in a stronger than expected position during the third quarter. Despite approximately $600 million of cash outflows from closing the Olympus transaction, the previously disclosed legal settlement, and working capital impacts, our net debt balance ended the quarter just under $8 billion. We continue to target a maximum of $5 billion of total debt, which is three times unlevered free cash flow before strategic growth CapEx at a $2.75 natural gas price. With $19 billion of forecasted cumulative free cash flow attributable to EQT over the next five years at recent strip pricing, we have plenty of capacity to execute on our capital allocation priorities, which include investing in high-return strategic growth projects, further deleveraging, steadily growing our base dividend, and building cash to opportunistically buy back shares. Last week, we increased our base dividend by 5%, to $0.66 per share on an annualized basis, as we begin returning permanent cost structure improvements and synergy capture to shareholders. Our credit ratings are stabilized, and we are on a glide path of further balance sheet strengthening. We have now grown our base dividend at an approximate 8% compound annual growth rate since 2022. This is a testament to our confidence in the sustainability of our business and a corporate free cash flow breakeven price that is among the lowest in North America. We will continue to look for ways to recycle structural cost savings into future growth, ensuring that our base dividend is bulletproof through commodity cycles. Turning to LNG, we signed offtake agreements with Sempra's Port Arthur, Next Decade's Rio Grande, and Commonwealth LNG beginning in the 2030 and 2031 time frame. These SPAs represent patient execution of the LNG strategy that we began formulating in 2022, as we waited for the right time to gain exposure to high-quality facilities with geographic diversification, competitive pricing, and favorable credit terms. We intentionally positioned our exposure to begin after the 2027 to 2029 window, which we have flagged for several years as a potential period of global oversupply. This oversupply should result in a trough period of new LNG FID activity, and lower prices should stimulate new international demand, setting the stage for tightening fundamentals concurrent with the commencement of our contracts. While we remain bullish on domestic demand growth, we believe that international growth will increase even faster, and it is important to have the right exposure in our portfolio to these markets. Our strategy of signing SPAs on tolling arrangements provides direct connectivity to the international markets, with less downside risk and greater upside optionality than netback deal structures. Our structures give us complete end-market flexibility, allowing us to provide tailor-made solutions to end-market customers globally, with varying contract tenors and price benchmarks over the 20-year lives of these contracts. We are taking the same direct-to-customer approach to LNG we have deployed domestically with utilities and data centers. We expect to enter into sales agreements and regasification capacity covering a large portion of our LNG exposure in the coming years, leaving us with a geographically diversified portfolio of customers and pricing exposure. Our recent discussions with international buyers give us confidence in the long-term LNG demand outlook and suggest a desire to contract with an integrated US-based natural gas producer that can offer greater flexibility than legacy LNG suppliers due to their short exposure at Henry Hub. It's worth noting that EQT is the second-largest marketer of natural gas in the U.S., ahead of all upstream and midstream peers as well as the super majors. LNG marketing is a natural bolt-on to our existing capabilities, and we've been building our expertise over the past several years. While the U.S. market has significant demand tailwinds over the near and medium term, global growth in natural gas demand should far outpace the domestic market over the long term. We expect natural gas demand outside the U.S. to rise by 200 Bcf per day between now and 2050, highlighting the tremendous opportunity for U.S. producers that can directly access international markets. However, that access will only be available to producers that have the combination of low-cost structure, multiple decades of quality inventory, an investment-grade balance sheet, and strong environmental attributes, all of which are hallmarks of the differentiated platform we have built at EQT. Turning to the natural gas macro, we see a supportive setup emerging as we head into year-end, with a tightening balance driven by factors including surging LNG demand and slowing associated gas supply growth as crude oil prices weaken. On the demand side, the U.S. is on track to exit 2025 with over 4 Bcf per day of incremental LNG demand compared to year-end 2024, the largest annual increase since the U.S. began exporting LNG almost ten years ago. The startup of Golden Pass and continued ramp-up of the Corpus Christi Stage 3 expansion are expected to add another 2.5 Bcf to 3 Bcf per day of demand by year-end 2026, providing a further tailwind for U.S. natural gas prices. Looking ahead to winter weather, several major forecasters are calling for one of the coldest winters in over a decade, as early indications suggest a transition from El Nino to a moderate La Nina phase. This transition tends to produce below-normal temperatures across key U.S. consuming regions, including the Midwest and Northeast. A return to sustained cold could drive a meaningful rebound in residential and commercial heating demand, tightening inventories and accelerating the drawdown pace by late Q1. Finally, on the supply side, we anticipate flat associated gas volumes through 2026. The rig reductions and capital discipline we've seen across major oil basins this year are beginning to translate into lower associated gas growth, particularly from the Permian. Should Brent and WTI prices remain in the 50s as OPEC increases production and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East ease, oil prices could approach breakeven economics for many producers and further discourage incremental oil activity. Together, these trends point to a tighter supply picture emerging into 2026 and 2027, supporting a more durable recovery in U.S. gas prices. In sum, the U.S. gas market is entering a critical inflection point. Rapidly growing LNG demand and slowing associated gas production point to a constructive setup in 2026, which could be bolstered further should a cold winter manifest. That said, we remain vigilant over the medium term due to the wave of new Permian pipelines scheduled to be completed by 2026 and an increasing risk of LNG oversupply later this decade, which we believe could temporarily back up gas supply into U.S. storage and set up another short down cycle. Wrapping up, I want to point out a couple of items on our updated guidance and provide a few thoughts as we think ahead to 2026. Our fourth quarter production and operating expense guidance includes the impact of 15 to 20 Bcfe of strategic curtailments during October, as our teams continue to optimize around in-basin pricing volatility. Additionally, recent IRS guidance suggests that we will not be subject to AMT in 2025, and thus, we now expect to pay minimal cash taxes this year, which will save nearly $100 million relative to our prior forecast. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect to maintain production volumes at a level consistent with our 2025 exit rate. We expect maintenance CapEx in line with 2025 plus the full-year impact of the Olympus acquisition. As our compression projects are completed and base declines shallow, we expect maintenance CapEx to decline towards $2 billion later this decade. As we highlighted last quarter, we have an expanding backlog of high-return infrastructure growth projects which will unlock sustainable growth for our upstream business. We are excited to allocate the first dollars of our free cash flow after maintenance CapEx to these opportunities, which we believe will create more long-term shareholder value than any other reinvestment opportunity available to us today. Our total capital spend in the years ahead will be based on the quality of the investment opportunity set in a given year, and we hope to continue sourcing opportunities and unlock differentiated value across our integrated platform. Our pipeline of projects provides a low-risk, high-return reinvestment opportunity that is unique to EQT, allowing us to drive sustainable cash flow per share growth and compound capital for shareholders for years to come. With that, I'd like to open the call to questions.