Thank you, Ivo. I'll begin on Slide 8 and review our core sales performance by region. China and East Asia performed well in the quarter, delivering modest growth. This was more than offset by a broad macro weakness in Europe and soft industrial activity in the Americas. In North America, core sales declined approximately 3% and were primarily affected by lower OEM demand. Industrial OEM channel sales decreased double digits with the agriculture and construction end markets most impactful to our performance. North American replacement channel sales expanded mid-single digits with high single-digit growth in auto replacement and a slight increase in industrial replacement. In EMEA, core sales fell just over 6%. OEM sales decreased double digits with automotive experiencing significant weakness. Industrial OEM sales were down low single digits. Replacement sales were mixed with automotive replacement core growth in the low single digits and industrial replacement down in the low teens. At the end market level, agriculture and energy were headwinds, while personal mobility returned to growth. China core sales grew modestly and benefited from strength in the replacement channel. Industrial replacement grew mid-teens, supported by demand strength in the diversified industrial end market. Automotive replacement expanded high single digits. The growth was slightly offset by a low single-digit decline in OEM sales, driven by automotive softness. East Asia and India posted 3.5% growth in core sales. Automotive OEM sales declined low single digits, which was more than offset by growth in the automotive replacement channel and industrial end markets. South America core sales declined mid to high single digits, primarily impacted by logistics disruptions in Brazil. On Slide 9, we display the key components of our year-over-year change in adjusted earnings per share. Lower volume was a $0.06 per share headwind to adjusted earnings per share but was largely mitigated by contributions from our enterprise initiatives. Other items and a lower share count contributed $0.01. Slide 10 has an update on our cash flow performance and balance sheet trends at year-end. Our free cash flow for the fourth quarter was $158 million, which represented 168% conversion to adjusted net income. As previously mentioned, we are keeping healthy inventory levels to help strengthen our ability to fully capitalize on an anticipated demand inflection. Also, we pulled forward some CapEx investments to accelerate the timing of certain footprint optimization projects and deploy capital to certain systems enhancement programs. Our net leverage ratio was 2.2x at the end of the year, down slightly from 2.3x at the end of 2023. We made good progress with our balance sheet in 2024. Specifically, we lowered our gross debt by over $100 million and executed a successful refinancing of our full debt stack during the middle of the year. In the fourth quarter, we delivered a 50 basis point reduction on our term loan spreads, which will lower our interest expense for 2025. We believe that we are in a strong position to realize our 2026 net leverage target of 1 to 2x. Our trailing 12-month return on invested capital finished at 24%, a 100 basis point increase compared to year-end 2023. We continue to deploy capital to support enterprise initiatives and system enhancements. These internal projects are typically our highest return opportunities. On Slide 11, we introduced our full year 2025 guidance and our expectations for the first quarter. For 2025, we have initiated guidance for core revenues to be in the range of down 0.5% to up 3.5% relative to 2024. Importantly, at the midpoint of 1.5% growth, we have assumed end market contribution as a slight headwind on a weighted average basis. We anticipate year-over-year core growth will improve as the year progresses. We are budgeting about a 3% headwind from foreign exchange for the year, with greater impact expected in the first half of the year. Our initial 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance is in the range of $735 million to $795 million. At the midpoint, our guidance represents a 50 basis point year-over-year increase in adjusted EBITDA margin. Our adjusted earnings per share guidance is in the range of $1.36 per share to $1.52 per share. We are spending more on capital expenditures in 2025 to support high-return projects. We anticipate our free cash flow to exceed 90% of our adjusted net income in 2025. For the first quarter, we estimate total revenues to be in the range of $805 million to $835 million and core revenues to be down approximately 1% at the midpoint. For the first quarter, we expect our adjusted EBITDA margin to decrease in a range of 40 basis points to 80 basis points compared to Q1 2024. On Slide 12, we show a walk that helps explain the moving pieces in our Q1 adjusted EBITDA margin. Starting from the left, our Q1 2024 adjusted EBITDA margin benefited 70 basis points from the realization of insurance proceeds. Excluding these non-recurring proceeds, our Q1 2024 adjusted EBITDA margin was approximately 22%. At the midpoint of our Q1 guidance, we expect a 1% core sales decrease, which we estimate impacts adjusted EBITDA margin by about 40 basis points. We expect to more than offset the lower sales with contributions from our enterprise initiatives and improved mix. As such, we would be generating a 22.6% adjusted EBITDA margin in the quarter without an estimated 50 basis point headwind from unfavorable foreign exchange rates. On Slide 13, we provide a walk to our 2025 adjusted EBITDA at the midpoint. We expect operational items to add a little over $50 million to our profitability with contributions from our enterprise initiatives and footprint optimization. FX is estimated to be about a $34 million headwind to profitability based on about a $100 million reduction year-over-year to our top line. We also had some favorable items in 2024 that we don’t expect to repeat in 2025 such as the insurance proceeds, I just noted, as well as, a gain from the sale of real estate. An important point on the slide is the profit headwind incurred from foreign exchange. The $34 million headwind is more than the difference between the consensus 2025 adjusted EBITDA at the midpoint of our guidance. On Slide 14, we display an adjusted earnings per share walk for 2025. From left to right, we project about a $0.12 benefit from operational items. Foreign exchange represents a $0.10 headwind to adjusted earnings per share compared to the prior year period. Non-recurring and below-the-line items net to a $0.03 share improvement. On Slide 15, we provide some more color and background on our CapEx plans and our margin progress. On the left, you see we intend to spend above our depreciation expense in 2025 and 2026 to support our footprint optimization projects and enhance our system capabilities. In the middle, you see our march to 24.5% adjusted EBITDA margin by 2026. Our 2025 adjusted EBITDA margin guidance of 22.8% includes a 40 basis point headwind from unfavorable FX and system investments. Importantly, our margin progress to date has been achieved with no volume support, and our footprint optimization savings are yet to be realized. As such, we believe we are in good position to deliver our 2026 adjusted EBITDA margin target. I will now turn it back over to Ivo.