Thank you, Christian. Our strong top-line performance for the quarter and the year reflects the strength of JLL's differentiated platform, services, and talent. The revenue growth, along with our ongoing focus on operating efficiency, produced meaningful margin expansion and earnings growth in 2024. Importantly, our initiatives to improve working capital efficiency helped drive strong conversion to free cash flow. I will now review our operating performance by segment. Beginning with markets advisory, the increase in fourth-quarter revenue was primarily driven by leasing, which generated double-digit growth across most geographies, notably the US, India, and Greater China. Leasing revenue growth was broad-based across asset classes and led by office, which grew 20% globally and outpaced the 7% increase in the market according to JLL research. The US and Asia Pacific also meaningfully outperformed respective market growth rates for office. The slight uptick in our industrial sector leasing revenue was geographically broad-based and compared favorably to the high teens market decline. Both Asia Pacific and the Americas notably outpaced the respective industrial market growth rate. Large transactions, where JLL historically has had a greater share of the market, increased in nearly all asset classes, though they remain well below pre-pandemic averages. Property management growth in the quarter and the full year was a result of portfolio expansion in the US and several Asia Pacific countries, largely due to greater pass-through costs as management fees were flat for the quarter and increased marginally for the full year. Higher markets advisory adjusted EBITDA for the quarter and full year was primarily driven by leasing revenue growth. The timing of prior year incentive compensation accruals adversely impacted year-over-year profitability for the quarter. Compared with the quarter, the full-year profit reflected improved platform leverage. Looking ahead, we continue to see growth in activity. The general stability of the OECD business confidence index throughout much of 2024 and a recent acceleration in the US provides optimism for continued leasing growth in 2025, although possible headwinds from geopolitical developments may impact decision-making. Within property management, we expect trends from 2024 to continue into 2025, while we work to bring together our teams and evolve our positioning under the new organizational structure we announced last quarter. Shifting to our capital markets segments, an acceleration in investment sales, debt and equity advisory revenue in the quarter and the full year was catalyzed in part by improved investor sentiment, greater interest rate stability, elevated levels of dry powder, and more liquidity entering the market, which led to more institutional investors willing to transact. In the quarter, revenue increased across asset classes, with significant growth in the US multifamily sector, and notable growth in industrial across the globe. Our investment sales revenue, which accounted for just over 40% of segment revenue in the quarter, grew over 35%, and our global debt advisory revenue grew approximately 70%. The US and Asia Pacific performed notably better than our respective market sales activity recorded by JLL Research, driven in part by our leading platform, technology, and people. The capital markets adjusted EBITDA growth for the quarter and the full year was predominantly driven by higher transactional revenues and continued cost discipline. The full-year adjusted EBITDA growth was partially offset by a nearly $20 million adverse impact from the repurchase of a Fannie Mae loan in August and a $5 million non-cash increase in loan loss credit reserves. Looking ahead, we are encouraged by the strengthening of the real estate debt market, banks more actively quoting on and closing loans in the US, and the general stability reflected in our proprietary bid intensity index. Our global investment sales, debt, and equity advisory pipeline is robust, so the evolution of the interest rate and economic outlook will continue to influence the timing and pace of deal closing. Moving next to Work Dynamics. Revenue growth for the quarter and the year was led by Work Dynamics, stemming from both new client wins and mandate expansion as well as incremental pass-through costs in the US. The near 30% growth on a two-year stack basis in workplace management revenue in the quarter reflects our differentiated platform capabilities. Project management revenue growth accelerated in the quarter and was broad-based across most geographies as higher pass-through costs augmented the near 10% growth in management fees, largely from new wins and an increase in existing client volumes. For the year, project management growth was attributable to higher pass-through costs and mid-single-digit management fees growth. The Work Dynamics adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was flat as the revenue growth was offset by a lower actuarial benefit associated with US medical self-insurance and incremental investments in our platforms, including technology and artificial intelligence capability, which we believe will support long-term growth and margin expansion. Looking at the full year, the margin expanded for the third consecutive year, driven by revenue growth and platform scale, which more than offset the fourth-quarter items and an elevated gross receipt tax expense in the third quarter. Entering 2025, we expect workplace management growth to moderate as we lap the meaningful new wins, which onboarded in 2024. We remain confident in the long-term trajectory of the workplace management business as our sales pipeline is strong, and we are focused on capturing mandate expansion opportunities. Looking at project management, the recovery in leasing activity bodes well for securing additional mandates, though the current level of corporate CapEx spending may dampen near-term growth rates. We continue to align technology investments to drive superior client outcomes and platform scaling to enable further margin expansion. Turning to JLL Technologies. Continued growth in software services revenue was more than offset by lower technology solutions bookings over the past year, which drove the segment revenue decline for both the quarter and the full year. The lower revenue and impact of the year-over-year change in carried interest drove the adjusted EBITDA decline. We are progressing to sustained profitability within this segment as we balance investments to drive growth. Now to LaSalle. Higher incentive fees and asset dispositions on behalf of clients drove the revenue increase in the quarter. Advisory fees declined in the quarter and for the full year on the impact of lower in Europe from the structural changes to a lower margin business we discussed in previous quarters as well as lower assets under management over the past twelve months. Absent foreign currency exchange movements, assets under management are down 3% from a year earlier, half of which was from lower valuations. After about two and a half years of declines, valuations broadly continue to stabilize and are reflected in our positive LaSalle equity earnings for the quarter. The increase in LaSalle's adjusted EBITDA in the quarter was driven by the higher incentive fees net of related variable compensation expense. Though muted compared to normalized levels, full-year capital raising and deployment was higher than the prior year, and investor interest continues to pick up, particularly for credit and core products. While we see momentum and deployment opportunities adding to assets under management over the course of the year, foreign currency and recent asset dispositions are notable near-term headwinds. Turning to free cash flow. The increase in the quarter and full year was largely due to improvement in net reimbursables and higher cash earnings from improved business performance as well as greater incentive compensation accruals. Higher receivables attributable to business growth were a partial offset for both the quarter and full year. An increase in cash taxes and a repurchase of a loan from Fannie Mae in the third quarter were also partial offsets for the full-year free cash flow. Regarding the Fannie Mae loan we repurchased, we continue to work to improve the property and towards an eventual sale. We also continue to monitor the loans originated for the agencies with confirmed or potential fraud situations. There's a portfolio of loans to a single borrower that is currently in default with confirmed borrower fraud. We have begun discussions with Fannie Mae on next steps and resolution of the situation. Shifting to our balance sheet and capital allocation. Liquidity totaled $3.6 billion at the end of the fourth quarter, including $3.2 billion of undrawn credit facility capacity. In addition, we had $2.3 billion of untapped capacity on our commercial paper program. As of December 31st, reported net leverage was 0.7 times, down from 1.2 times a year earlier due to both a reduction in net debt and higher adjusted EBITDA over the trailing twelve months. We expect a typical seasonal increase in leverage in the first quarter, driven in part by annual incentive compensation payments, as well as the $100 million incremental growth investment in JLL Income Property Trust that we announced last quarter and subsequently made in January. As Christian mentioned, we deployed capital over the course of 2024 to further differentiate our platform and capabilities while also returning capital to shareholders and reducing leverage. Regarding our 2025 full-year financial outlook, we are optimistic for a continued pickup in transaction activity, though the pace may be uneven and nuanced across geographies. Growth in our more resilient business lines collectively remains solid, driven by a vast market opportunity and the uniqueness of JLL's data-driven and globally scaled platform capabilities. As we continue to invest to both capture future growth opportunities and drive operating leverage, we are targeting a full-year 2025 adjusted EBITDA range of $1.25 billion to $1.45 billion, reflective of 14% growth at the midpoint. Our outlook reflects typical seasonality and includes the notable strengthening of the US dollar, as around 40% of revenues are generated outside the United States. We continue to see significant opportunities to drive growth and enhance the resiliency and efficiency of our business, positioning our team to leverage our platform and deliver exceptional service to our clients. Christian, back to you.