Thanks, Frank. First, I'll spend a few minutes discussing our available liquidity, share repurchases and the capital position. The parent began the year with liquid assets of approximately $90 million and ended the year with liquid assets of approximately $80 million. In the fourth quarter, the company repurchased approximately 1.3 million shares of Globe Life Inc. common stock for a total cost of approximately $170 million at an average share price of $134.44. For the full year, we purchased 5.4 million shares for a total cost of $685 million at an average share price of $126.41. Including shareholder dividend payments of approximately $85 million, the company returned approximately $770 million to shareholders during 2025. In addition to the liquid assets held by the parent, the parent will generate excess cash flows during 2026. The parent company's excess cash flow, as we define it, results primarily from the dividends received by the parent from its subsidiaries, less interest paid on debt and is available to return to its shareholders in the form of dividends and through share repurchases. We invest -- we continue to invest in our growth through making investments in the business, in new business, technology and insurance operations. It should be noted that the cash received by the parent company from our insurance operations is after our subsidiaries have made these substantial investments and acquired new long-duration assets to fund their future cash needs. In 2025, parent excess cash flow, excluding the benefit of extraordinary dividends, was approximately $620 million. Although statutory results are not yet final, for 2026, we anticipate excess cash flow to increase to approximately $625 million to $675 million, given recent favorable mortality trends and growth in premium. We will continue to use our cash as efficiently as possible. We still believe that share repurchases provide the best return or yield to our shareholders over other available alternatives. Thus, we anticipate share repurchases will continue to be the primary use of parent's excess cash flow after the payment of shareholder dividends. In our guidance, we anticipate distributing between $85 million to $95 million -- sorry, $85 million to $90 million to our shareholders in the form of dividend payments with the remainder being used for share repurchases in the range of $535 million to $585 million. We anticipate liquid assets at the parent to be in the range of $50 million to $60 million at the end of 2026. Now with regards to the capital positions at our insurance subsidiaries. Our goal is to maintain capital within our insurance operations at levels necessary to support our current ratings. Global Life targets a consolidated company action level RBC ratio in the range of 300% to 320%. Although this target range is lower than many of our peers, it is appropriate given the stable premium revenue from our large number of in-force policies, the nature of our protection products with benefits that are not sensitive to interest rates or equity markets. Our conservative investment portfolio and strong consistent underwriting margins, which result in consistent statutory earnings at our insurance companies. Since our statutory financial statements are not yet final, our consolidated RBC ratio for year-end 2025 is not yet known. However, we anticipate the final 2025 RBC ratio will be within our targeted range. During the quarter, we finalized the licensing and formation of Globe Life Re LTD, a Bermuda reinsurance affiliate for the purposes of reinsuring a portion of new business and in-force life insurance policies issued by Globe Life affiliates and executed the initial reinsurance transactions. As previously noted, we estimate parent excess cash flow will increase from incremental earnings from our U.S. and Bermuda subsidiaries over time as the reinsurance block grows. We anticipate parent's annual excess cash flow will increase over time toward $200 million as earnings emerge from reinsurance additional in-force and new business. This additional excess cash flow will enhance the financial strength of the company and will provide additional financial flexibility for the parent to support growth. Now with regards to policy obligations for the current quarter, for the fourth quarter, policy obligations as a percent of premium has declined from 36.7% in the year-ago quarter to 35.4%, consistent with continued favorable trends in mortality. Health policy obligations as a percent of premium were 53.7% compared with 54.1% from the year ago quarter. For United American individual Medicare supplement claim trends have been relatively stable. However, we did see seasonally high claims in the fourth quarter for both individual and group health products. Now with regards to our full year underwriting margins, normalized for the impact of assumption updates. As I mentioned on previous calls, as required by GAAP accounting standards, each year, we review and generally update actuarial assumptions for mortality, morbidity and lapses, and we have chosen to do this in the third quarter each year. When assumptions changes are made, GAAP accounting standards require a cumulative catch-up adjustment. This cumulative catch-up is the assumption related remeasurement gain or loss, an assumption remeasurement gain lowers the reserve balances and indicates an improved outlook as less premium is needed to fund reserves to meet future policy obligations. The opposite is true if there is an assumption remeasurement loss. To better understand the performance of the business for the full year, we think it is beneficial to look at normalized underwriting margins, which exclude the impact of assumption changes and provide an improved basis for comparison of year-over-year results. For the full year 2025, normalized life underwriting margin as a percentage of premium increased to 41% compared with 39.7% for the prior year. Normalized life policy obligations as a percent of premium improved by over 2 percentage points from the prior year due to favorable mortality trends but was partially offset by higher amortization of acquisition costs. Normalized health margin as a percent of premium was 25.4% compared with 27.3% for the prior year and is reflective of higher claims experience and the timing of premium rate increases during the year at United American. Finally, with respect to our '26 guidance. For the full year '26 we estimate net operating earnings per diluted share will be in the range of $14.95 to $15.65, representing 5% earnings per share growth at the midpoint of the range. This is an increase from our prior guidance related primarily to continued improved mortality and experience trends that we are monitoring, including anticipated positive impacts from life assumption updates that will occur in the third quarter. In addition, we are anticipating higher health underwriting margins given the strong premium growth at United American. Normalized earnings per share growth, which removes the impact of assumption updates in both 2025 and in the midpoint of 2026 is approximately 10%. At the midpoint of our guidance, we anticipate total premium revenue growth of 7% to 8% with life premium growth growing 4% to 4.5% and health premium revenue growth growing 14% to 16%. Health premium growth is benefiting not only from strong growth in Medicare Supplement sales in 2025, but also $80 million to $90 million of additional annualized premiums resulting from approved rate increases on individual Medicare Supplement policies that would be phased in throughout 2026 and fully implemented by 2027. Recall the majority of these rate increases will be effective beginning in the second quarter of 2026. As a result, this delay, along with seasonally high claims typically incurred in the first quarter, we anticipate United American's health margin percentage in the first quarter will be lower than the full year margin percent of 8% to 10%. However, we anticipate an average of 10% to 11% in the last 3 quarters of the year as the full effect of the premium rate increases is realized. We anticipate underwriting margins as a percent of premium to be in the range of 41.5% to 44.5% for the Life segment and 23% to 27% for the Health segment. In our guidance, we anticipate recent favorable trends will continue through 2026. Given this, our '26 guidance range reflects an estimated third quarter benefit from assumption updates and resulting remeasurement gain of $50 million to $100 million, which is expected to increase the life margin as a percent of premium in the third quarter to a range of 48% to 52%. Those are my comments. I'll now turn it over to Matt.