Thanks, Graham, and thank you all for joining us today. I'd like to begin today's call, as we do with all meetings at Kodiak by discussing safety. I've said this before, but our goal is for each of our employees to return home safely to their families at the end of every day. We made great strides in our safety performance in 2025, but our goal remains 0 work-related injuries. I want to thank our safety and training teams who work hard to equip our employees with the knowledge and tools to do their job safely, our customers for embracing our safety culture; and lastly, our technicians who embody our safety-first mindset. 2025 was another record-setting year for Kodiak. We entered the year with a plan to continue to high-grade our compression fleet by divesting underutilized nonstrategic small horsepower units and to exit operations in noncore areas, allowing us to focus on our core large horsepower operations. I'm proud to say that we ended 2025 with 100% of our operations located in the U.S. and with the largest average horsepower fleet in the industry. The work we did high-grading our fleet also allowed us to deliver strong increases in fleet utilization, adjusted gross margins and free cash flow. Given the high margins and stable operations, our core compression business generates predictable, growing contracted cash flows that we reinvest both in our compression fleet and in tools and technologies that set us up for future success. Some of our highlights from the last year include: successfully implementing a new ERP system to provide us enterprise-wide, real-time information in order to make more informed business decisions. Our team did an amazing job with the rollout of the new software. We've been operating in the new system without issue since August 1. And at year-end, we closed our accounting books in record time, an extraordinary execution by Kodiak. Investing further in AI and machine learning technologies to drive operational excellence and better customer outcomes. We've deployed our custom large language model to help our technicians quickly diagnose issues encountered in the field and are using agentic AI to source repair parts across our system. Our technology road map for 2026 includes wearable devices and autonomous solutions to enhance our technicians capabilities, collect more data on our fleet, reduce risk and allow our people to focus on high-value activities. And we also broke ground on a new state-of-the-art training and operations facility in Midland. The new industry-leading facility is expected to be the largest of its kind, allowing us to continue to train and develop the best workforce in the industry. We plan to move in, in May. Financially, we successfully managed the exit of our former private equity sponsor, eliminating any perceived equity overhang. As a recap, EQT owned approximately 76% of our shares after we went public in 2023. Over the last 1.5 years, through a series of secondary offerings, EQT completely exited its Kodiak investment, much earlier than originally expected. We appreciate everyone who participated in the stock offerings. Additionally, we overhauled our balance sheet, terming out a large portion of our ABL. This further reduced our reliance on secured bank debt, increased liquidity and extended our weighted average debt maturity, providing us with enhanced balance sheet strength and financial flexibility. Also at year-end, I'm proud to say that we delivered on the promise we made at IPO and achieved our leverage target of 3.5x. Lastly, we maintained our commitment to return capital to shareholders. We increased our dividend with Q4's declared dividend up 20% year-over-year, and we bought back over $100 million in common stock at an average price of $33.79 per share. In total, we returned over $260 million to our shareholders this year. By all measures, 2025 was a great year for Kodiak. And with the recently announced acquisition of Distributed Power Solutions, we're starting 2026 with a lot of positive momentum. We'll give more details after we close, but I can say that we've received a lot of inbound interest in our new distributed power offerings since the announcement and are already working to procure additional power generation capacity through our existing network of vendors to deploy this year after we close. We think the market will continue to move in our direction as large power consumers are increasingly looking to lock in 10-year plus deals for base power. On to Contract Services, as we have said before, we are really excited about compression. Compression and power are very synergistic and align well for our customers and ongoing relationships. We ended 2025 with $4.35 million revenue generating horsepower. Average horsepower per revenue generating unit was 970, a figure that continues to lead the industry and has increased each quarter since we closed the CSI acquisition. For the year, we added approximately 150,000 new large horsepower to our fleet. Our investments to grow our fleet along with strategic divestitures of noncore units drove our fleet utilization to 98%, another industry-leading metrics. As we will discuss later in our outlook for 2026, despite slowing oil production growth, the outlook for natural gas supply growth remains highly visible. Last year, Permian natural gas production grew 10% or roughly 2 Bcf per day. Keep in mind, this production growth happened in a limited takeaway environment with negative pricing in West Texas for most of the year. Given the increasing gas-to-oil ratios, we expect sustainable gas growth out of the Permian Basin even in a flat oil environment. This favorable backdrop is driving strong compression demand, one of the many reasons why I'm excited about our 2026 capital spending program, which I'll discuss later. Yesterday, we released our fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial results. I'll hit the highlights and let John provide more details. For the year, Kodiak set new records in total revenue, adjusted EBITDA, discretionary cash flow and free cash flow. Total revenue grew by 13% to $1.3 billion and adjusted EBITDA grew by 17%, $715 million. The growth was driven by the outstanding execution of our core strategy by Kodiak personnel and our ongoing investment in organic large horsepower growth and the deployment of our technology and AI initiatives. Our technology advances are the result of several years of development, and we are just starting to see the efficiency improvement of our investment. We've significantly reduced the cost of media repairs to our fleet by using data to identify abnormal operating conditions and address them before they turn into expensive component failures. These early wins give us confidence to continue to invest in technology, allowing us to increase equipment availability and reduce mechanical failures, driving additional value to our customers, and increasing our operating margins. We generated $230 million of free cash flow in 2025 after investing to grow our large horsepower fleet and high grading our overall fleet. Our strong free cash flow led to an industry-leading free cash flow yield and allowed us to reduce outstanding debt and achieve our stated leverage ratio goal of 3.5x at year-end. Now diving into fourth quarter results. We once again delivered year-over-year growth in contract services revenues and adjusted gross margin. Impressively, our Contract Services adjusted gross margin percentage increased 247 basis points year-over-year to 69.2%, exceeding the high end of our guidance. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was up 9% year-over-year to $184 million, setting a new company record. Given strong customer demand, historically high industry-wide utilization, and capital discipline in a contract compression industry, pricing conversations with customers continue to be constructive. During 2025, we recontracted approximately 40% of our fleet and exited the year with only 10% of our contracts on a month-to-month basis with the rest under multiyear contracts. While we have a smaller percentage of our horsepower up for recontracting in 2026, the compression market remains tight with horsepower pricing continuing to increase. In our Other Services segment, fourth quarter results reflected a sequential pickup in activity as we had a positive uptick in shop services and station construction revenues. Overall, this segment generates free cash flow with minimal capital investment. Next, I'd like to discuss the evolving natural gas market and increasing lead times for large horsepower engines. Over the next 3 quarters, approximately 4.5 Bcf per day of incremental Permian gas pipeline takeaway capacity is expected to come online. And there's another 7 Bcf per day of additional Permian takeaway pipelines expected by the end of the decade. What's more, we have seen estimates from research firms of more than 2 Bcf per day of in-basin gas consumption for power generation by the end of the decade, including distributed power like DPS and major power plants. This is on top of the highly visible increase in feed gas required for U.S. LNG. After ramping up by roughly 3 Bcf per day in 2025, LNG export capacity is set to increase by another 2 Bcf per day in 2026, with an additional 13 Bcf per day of LNG export capacity expected by the end of 2035. These developments will have a resoundingly positive impact on gas pricing and production in the Permian Basin. A combination of higher in-basin demand, increased takeaway capacity, better pricing and ever-increasing gas to oil ratio is expected to lead to substantial Permian gas volume growth in the back half of this decade. The significant step-up in midstream and compression capacity needed to support the gas growth in the Permian Basin, in addition to the rapidly growing demand for distributed power generation has driven lead times for new large horsepower compression equipment to greater than 100 weeks. The combination of extended lead times and highly visible compression demand has required our commercial team to engage with customers about longer-term plans. We've already begun receiving commitments from customers for new compression equipment in 2027 and 2028. On the supply chain side, we're using our buying power and leading position in the industry to secure new compression equipment and are confident we'll be able to hit our long-term horsepower growth targets despite historically high lead times as we've already secured engine deliveries and shop space into 2028. In total, we expect to deploy over 750,000 new large horsepower compression between now and the end of 2030. Now turning to our outlook for 2026. We have a lot of positive momentum heading into the year. Despite the increased lead times for new equipment, we plan on delivering approximately 150,000 new unit horsepower in 2026 with an average horsepower per unit of approximately 1,700 horsepower, further solidifying our position as the industry leader in large horsepower compression. We're also in discussions with a handful of our customers about purchase leaseback opportunities and expect to announce one soon. We view purchase leaseback transactions as low-risk acquisitions, they have the benefit of accelerating our growth and compelling returns on invested capital without adding additional compression capacity to the market. The strong pricing environment we've seen for the last several years continues, and we expect to deliver further margin increases as we capture operating efficiencies. And we're seeing positive signs in the station construction business, part sales and our Other Services segment. In summary, we had a great year. Our adjusted EBITDA significantly exceeded both our initial guidance for the year and our latest update, driven by operational efficiency and cost management. We high-graded our fleet, exited international operations and achieved our leverage target of 3.5x. We have numerous tailwinds heading into 2026 as demand for contract compression remains strong and utilization rates continue to be at record highs. We're extremely excited to add distributed power to our business offerings and believe the outlook for that business will allow us to increase our underlying growth rate and drive higher margins. And now I'll pass the call to John Griggs, to further discuss our financial results and our outlook for 2026. John?