Thank you, Jim. Looking back at 2025, our performance clearly demonstrated two things: capital discipline and improved cost performance. Our top line remains healthy. Revenue grew for the fifth consecutive year as we continue to expand our share of revenue, including nontraditional segments like hybrid trucks, while accelerating the growth of our higher margin paid software subscriptions. We also stayed disciplined on inventory, cutting U.S. gross stocks by 16% and ending the year at fifty-six retail days supply, the low end of our target range. We generated $3.5 billion of free cash flow and ended the year with close to $29 billion in cash, and nearly $50 billion in liquidity. We continue to prioritize our balance sheet, a significant competitive advantage, that provides flexibility to accelerate investments into accretive opportunities like Ford Energy, and both software and physical services. These are high margin, high growth opportunities grounded in disciplined capital allocation that will drive a higher returning more resilient business model over time. We remain committed to our investment grade rating, while also delivering top quartile shareholder returns through both share price appreciation and dividends, including the declaration of our first quarter regular dividend of $0.15 per share last week. Now turning to segment highlights. Ford Pro once again demonstrated its importance and persistence as a key profit pillar for Ford by delivering more than $66 billion of revenue and EBIT of $6.8 billion with a double-digit margin. Pro achieved this in the face of tariffs, production losses due to Novelis, normalization in U.S. industry pricing, and more commoditized areas like government and delivery vans. In the challenging macroeconomic and regulatory landscape in Europe, where we achieved market share growth. In the U.S., transit hit record sales, up 6%, and Super Duty had its best sales in over twenty years, up 10%. Pro continues to evolve its business by diversifying revenue streams and building out its high margin, service infrastructure. Paid software subscriptions grew by 30% last year. In 2025, we made meaningful progress in Ford Model e, improving structural cost, our mix of higher margin products, and driving adoption of affordable, high volume vehicles. Model e delivered revenue and volume growth of 7369%, respectively, driven by new product introductions in Europe. EBIT losses for the year improved to a $4.8 billion loss, reflecting fewer losses on Gen one products partially offset by increased investment in our Gen two products as we prepare for the launch of our UEV platform in 2027. The lower Gen one losses were driven by cost reductions and higher volume in Europe, where margins are stronger. Lastly, in December, we rationalized the role of pure EVs in our near-term product portfolio based on changing market realities in the U.S. Our disciplined approach to capital allocation will significantly improve the run rate of the business going forward. Our performance in Ford Blue was supported by our industry-leading power of choice and strength of our truck and SUV franchises. Revenue was roughly flat as higher net pricing and the strength of our product lineup offset most of the 5% decline in wholesales, which includes disruption from Novelis. In the U.S., Blue had the two best-selling hybrid trucks, Bronco had record sales, and Explorer was the number one three-row SUV. Our higher margin Raptor franchise also had record sales. Blue delivered $3 billion in EBIT as lower warranty, other cost improvements, and growth in software and physical services were more than offset by planned and unplanned lost production and adverse exchange. Ford Credit delivered full-year EBT of $2.6 billion and distributions of $1.7 billion. EBT was up 55% for the year, reflecting improved financing margin. Ford Credit continues to originate a high-quality book with U.S. retail and lease FICO scores exceeding 750. We are excited about the recent approval of our industrial bank application. This long-term initiative will expand our capabilities, enabling us to offer additional savings options to customers, further diversify and lower our cost of funding over time. So let me turn to our 2026 outlook. For the full year, we expect company adjusted EBIT of $8 billion to $10 billion, adjusted free cash flow of $5 billion to $6 billion, and capital expenditures of $9.5 billion to $10.5 billion. As we shift capital to higher return growth opportunities across our portfolio, including roughly $1.5 billion for Ford Energy. Our full-year outlook for the industry assumes a U.S. SAAR of 16 million to 16.5 million in flat industry pricing. Excluding Novelis, tailwinds and headwinds for Ford include positive market factors, including favorable mix associated with the sunset of low margin nameplates, and benefits from changes in the U.S. regulatory environment. Flat cost, which I would like to unpack further, we expect lower tariff costs of about $1 billion, reflecting a full year's worth of credit expansion. We also expect further material and warranty cost reductions building off our momentum in 2025. These combined savings allow us to absorb about $1 billion higher commodity prices driven by inflation, and pressure on DRAM as well as incremental investment in support of our UEB platform, the ramp of Ford Energy, and cycle plan actions that will drive higher return growth in 2027 and beyond. Additionally, we expect our high margin, software and physical services profit to grow by about 6.5%. Now let me frame Novelis for you. We expect year-over-year improvement of about $1 billion, which is back half weighted. This includes 1.5 to $2 billion of temporary costs, including tariffs, to ensure continuity in aluminum supply. These costs are not expected to be repeated in 2027. From a calendarization perspective, we expect our first quarter EBIT to be roughly flat sequentially. As we continue to work through the impact of Novelis. We expect to approach a more normalized EBIT in the second quarter with a plan to hit our underlying EBIT run rate level in the second half as volume stabilizes and our portfolio optimization takes hold. To help you better understand this calendarization, we have included a first half, second half bridge for you in our earnings deck. Our segment outlook anticipates another robust year at Ford Pro, with EBIT of $6.5 billion to $7.5 billion. The fundamentals of Pro's business are strong. In North America, we expect continued share growth in an industry that's roughly flat, enabled by conquest sales and a diversified channel mix, which we believe to be well balanced at roughly one-third large corporations, one-third SMB, and one-third government and rental fleets. We still see untapped demand for crew cab and diesel Super Duty, and most of our contractual deals for the year have already been agreed to. Ford Pro continues to improve its durability by growing its mix of profitable software and physical services globally, through precision customer targeting, demand generation initiatives, and Pro-specific solutions. While Pro's underlying business continues to strengthen, we expect 2026 results to be dampened by the near-term impact in Novelis, ramping Oakville to bolster Super Duty capacity in Canada, and a tougher regulatory climate in Europe. We expect losses of $4 billion to $4.5 billion for Ford Model e. This reflects about $1.6 billion of improvement in Gen one products driven by lower U.S. volume and cost savings from restructuring the business. These savings will be partially offset by around $600 million in higher Gen two costs as we near the launch of LFP batteries in Marshall, Michigan, and our UAV platform in Kentucky, along with roughly $400 million in startup costs for Ford Energy. The team is aggressively working on additional Gen one cost reductions in ways to further optimize the market equations in the U.S. and Europe. We continue to target Model E reaching breakeven in 2029. For Ford Blue, we expect EBIT of $4 to $4.5 billion, reflecting improvement in the underlying business as we recover from Novelis, favorable mix as we lean into our revenue and profit pillars, and continued progress in cost. Exciting new products like Bronco RTR and Mustang Dark Horse SC will help us expand our off-road leadership and grow our performance business. Furthermore, like Pro, we expect continued growth in our software and physical service offerings for retail customers through increased convenience and engagement. Lastly, Ford Credit's EBT will be about $2.5 billion. Relative to special items for 2026, in December, we announced actions to rebalance our EV portfolio and assets and launch more multi-energy platforms. In 2026 and 2027, we expect to record about $7 billion in charges related to our updated EV strategy and the expected disposition of our BOSC investment. Cash expenditures are expected to be up to about $5.5 billion, with most of this weighted in 2026. As I mentioned at the beginning, our 2025 performance demonstrated progress against our Ford Plus plan, not just in growth and profitability, but also quality, capital discipline, the right product portfolio, and consistent cash generation. Our underlying business is strong, and we are relentlessly working to strengthen it further as we continue to focus on improving both quality and cost as well as returns and cash flow. I'll now turn it over to the operator so we can start Q&A.