Thanks, Rick, and good morning, everyone. 2.5 years ago, in September 2022, Hippo hosted its first Investor Day. During that event, we committed to deliver positive adjusted EBITDA by the end of 2024 and to growing our revenue by 3.5x between then and calendar 2025 to between $420 million and $450 million. In the fourth quarter of 2024, we delivered on that guidance by posting positive adjusted EBITDA of $8.5 million and revenue that represents an annual run rate of approximately $410 million, which means we are on track to exceed our Investor Day revenue target in 2025. Over the past 2.5 years, we've responded quickly to changes in both the insurance and financial markets, transformed the fundamental risk dynamics of our business and laid a strong foundation for future margin enhancing growth. We've seen the benefits of these changes over the past few quarters, and they remain present as factors that helped us exceed our adjusted EBITDA guidance in Q4. In the fourth quarter, our total generated premium or TGP grew by 10% year-over-year to $295 million, driven by 22% year-over-year growth in our Insurance as a Service segment. This growth was partially offset by an expected decline of 8% in our Hippo home insurance program segment due to the completion of our efforts over the past 12 months to manage down our exposure to high cat geographies. If we normalize both current and prior year periods to exclude the TGP from our First Connect platform, which we sold a majority stake in during the quarter, the year-over-year growth rate would rise from 10% to 16%. Revenue growth in Q4 once again outpaced TGP growth, increasing 58% year-over-year to $102 million, up from $64 million in Q4 of last year. Like in the first three quarters of the year, higher premium retention at HHIP and volume increases in the Insurance as a Service and Services segments were the primary drivers of growth. As a result of the higher premium retention at HHIP, net earned premium as a percentage of gross earned premium in our HHIP business rose to 83% in Q4, up from 29% a year ago. Like in previous quarters, Insurance as a Service revenue growth was driven mostly by the premium growth from existing programs, augmented by slightly higher risk retention with some of the programs. We also launched a few new programs, which we expect to become significant growth drivers in 2025. Our HHIP gross loss ratio improved three percentage points year-over-year to 50%. The HHIP non-PCS loss ratio improved at an unprecedented rate of 20 percentage points to 43%, driven by the broad transformation we have been working on over the past 12 months, the activities of which included rate increases, structural changes to our coverages and other underwriting actions. We achieved this improvement despite the portfolio level shift away from higher cat geographies which, all things equal, would have tended to raise the non-PCS loss ratio. The HHIP/PCS cat loss ratio came in at 7% during Q4. This represents an increase of 17 percentage points year-over-year, which is mostly explained by substantial current and prior accident period reserve release in the fourth quarter of 2023 a year ago, which resulted in a PCS loss ratio of negative 10% in that period. The combination of year-over-year improvements in gross loss ratio and the improvements to our reinsurance structure, working our way into our financials drove an even larger improvement in our HHIP net loss ratio, which came in at 60% during the quarter, an improvement of 46 percentage points versus Q4 of last year. In Q4, we again delivered significant top line growth while simultaneously reducing our operating expenses, both as a percentage of revenue and on an absolute dollar basis. Relative to Q4 of last year, our GAAP sales and marketing, technology and development and general and administrative expenses collectively declined by $8 million, a year-over-year decrease of 19%. When combined with the increases in our revenue over the same period, these costs fell from 69% of revenue in Q4 of last year to 35% of revenue this quarter. Q4 net income came in at positive $44 million, an $86 million improvement versus Q4 of last year. $46 million of this improvement relates to the onetime gain from the sale of a majority stake in First Connect. The remaining $40 million of the improvement was driven by revenue growth at HHIP, enabled by our improved reinsurance structure, improvements to HHIP's gross loss ratio, better operating leverage and continued growth in our businesses that are less exposed to weather and underwriting volatility. Our Q4 adjusted EBITDA came in at positive $8.5 million, ahead of our previous guidance and a $31 million improvement versus Q4 of last year. The primary drivers of the year-over-year improvement are the same as the non-First Connect drivers of the net income improvement I just walked through. Q4 ending cash and investments increased quarter-over-quarter by $25 million to $571 million. This increase was driven by positive cash flow from the business, seasonal working capital changes associated with payments to reinsurers and proceeds from selling a majority of our shares in our First Connect platform, partially offset by our repurchase of shares during the quarter. Turning now to our guidance for 2025. Beyond the Q4 2024 adjusted EBITDA target we set at our Investor Day back in 2022, during that event, we also committed to deliver 2025 revenue of between $420 million and $450 million. We are now in a position to raise that revenue guidance to $465 million for calendar 2025 and to guide to positive net income by Q4 of 2025. The revenue guidance represents a 25% year-over-year growth rate from 2024 revenue on a GAAP basis and 27% year-over-year growth when First Connect is removed from our 2024 results. The expected improvement to turn net income profitable by Q4 '25 is driven by the continuation of the trends in the business that drove our adjusted EBITDA improvement in 2024. Specifically, excluding the benefits of prior accident year reserve releases, we expect continued year-over-year improvement in both gross and net loss ratios in calendar 2025 versus 2024 levels, even when factoring in the impact of the Q1 wildfires. As far as Q4 2025 specific guidance, we expect HHIP gross loss ratio to be less than 60% with an expected PCS cat load in that quarter of 15%. We expect HHIP net loss ratio in Q4 '25 to be less than 67%. Beyond improvements to loss ratio, we expect continued improvements to operating leverage with fixed expenses remaining roughly consistent with current levels despite the higher expected revenue. And now I'd like to turn the call back over to our CEO, Rick McCathron.