Thank you, Chris and good morning, everyone. I will begin on Slide 7 with a review of Q4 operating results. The quarter's results demonstrate our ability to execute our initiatives in the face of continued headwinds from inflation, foreign exchange and the slower pace of recovery in China. Sales increased by 4% year-over-year with 7% organic growth, partially offset by headwinds from foreign currency of 2% and unfavorable work days of 1%. As Chris pointed out, price remains a large portion of the sales increase. On a sequential basis from Q3, sales growth of 3% was at the lower end of our normal Q3 to Q4 seasonal pattern of up 3.4%, driven by a lower-than-normal volume increase. Operating expense as a percentage of sales increased 70 basis points year-over-year to 20% driven by the effects of inflation. Adjusted EBITDA and operating margins were 16.7% and 11.4% respectively, versus 19.1% and 12.3% in the prior year quarter. As in prior quarters, higher pricing substantially offset higher raw material, wage and general inflation in the quarter on a dollar basis. Lastly, foreign exchange headwinds from the strong U.S. dollar were approximately $2 million. The adjusted effective tax rate decreased year-over-year to 19.7% primarily due to adjustments related to valuation allowances and reserves related to certain tax positions. Adjusted earnings per share was $0.51 in the quarter versus adjusted EPS of $0.53 in the prior year period. The main drivers of our EPS performance are highlighted on the bridge on Slide 8. The year-over-year effect of operations this quarter was negative $0.03, due to lower volume and litigation settlement charge related to legacy operations. You can also clearly see the effects of the tax rate. Foreign exchange, which improved slightly from last quarter and the reduction in pension income on EPS with taxes contributing positive $0.05 in currency and reduced pension income each contributing negative $0.02. Please note that our U.S. pension plan remains overfunded and the change in pension income is non-cash and is driven by market factors. This change in assumptions has affected each quarter this fiscal year. Slides 9 and 10 detail the performance of our segments this quarter. Turning to Slide 9 for Metal Cutting. Reported metal cutting sales were up compared to the prior year quarter with 10% organic growth, partially offset by unfavorable foreign exchange and business days of 2% each. We achieved growth in all regions and end markets on a constant currency basis. By region, EMEA led at 12% followed by the Americas at 8% and Asia-Pacific at 1%. EMEA's year-over-year performance reflects growth driven by supply chain improvements affecting OEM backlogs and transportation and volume in general engineering. Americas year-over-year growth this quarter was driven by the execution of our growth initiatives in aerospace and defense and in the general engineering end market. Asia-Pacific's growth as Chris noted was primarily adversely affected by a slower recovery in China. Looking at sales by end market. Aerospace and defense grew 19% year-over-year as our strategic initiatives continue to drive results in this end market. General engineering grew 7% year-over-year with the strongest growth in Americas and EMEA, partially offset by a slower China recovery. Energy, which experienced some demand moderation in the fourth quarter grew 3%. And lastly, transportation grew 7% year-over-year benefiting from improved customer supply chains in EMEA, somewhat offset by weaker conditions in Asia-Pacific. Metal cutting adjusted operating margin of 12.6% increased 130 basis points year-over-year. Turning to Slide 10 for Infrastructure. Organic sales increased by 3% year-over-year offset by unfavorable foreign exchange of 2% and business days of 1%. Regionally, EMEA grew 13% followed by Asia-Pacific at 4% and sales in the Americas declined 2%. Looking at sales by end market. Energy grew 7%, mainly in EMEA from the delivery of a large order for pelletizing dyes used in plastics manufacturing but all regions saw growth. General engineering grew 5% due to improved demand in EMEA and Asia-Pacific partially offset by lower demand in the Americas. Earthworks declined 1% with modest growth in the EMEA and Asia-Pacific regions, offset by lower construction volume in the Americas. And lastly, aerospace and defense declined 4% due to order timing when compared to the prior year. Adjusted operating margin declined year-over-year to 9.6% primarily due to two factors. First, as discussed on prior calls, the favorability of price over material costs we had experienced is now negligible as raw material costs reflecting the current market costs are now flowing through the P&L. The second significant factor affecting the margin this quarter was lower sales volume, primarily in the earthworks end market in America's road rehabilitation. We are seeing and hearing from our customers about fewer projects this construction season. Customers are telling us that there are two factors causing this. First, our customers do not have enough labor to support the available work. And secondly, higher cost per mile have left municipalities with fixed budgets, no option, but to rehabilitate fewer miles of road. Sequentially, as we noted on our last call, we did see margin improve 480 basis points over the prior quarter. This improvement was primarily driven by increased sales volume and the abatement of the unfavorable absorption effects from power plant shutdowns earlier in the fiscal year. Now turning to Slide 11 to review our free operating cash flow and balance sheet. Our full year free operating cash flow was $169 million, nearly double the $85 million reported in the prior year. We are very pleased with the team's effort to deliver the best free operating cash flow since 2015. The primary driver for the increase in cash flow was improved working capital, specifically from a lower inventory level as the benefit of our focus on reducing inventory levels was realized. On a dollar basis, year-over-year primary working capital increased to $662 million. On a percentage of sales basis, primary working capital increased to 32.4%. Net capital expenditures were $89 million compared to $96 million in the prior year. In total for the year, we returned approximately $114 million to shareholders through our share repurchase and dividend programs. We repurchased $12 million of shares in Q4. Inception to date, we have repurchased $135 million or 4.7 million shares representing approximately 6% of outstanding shares. And as we have every quarter since becoming a public company over 50 years ago paid a dividend to our shareholders. Our commitment to returning cash to shareholders reflects our confidence in our ability to execute our strategy to drive growth and margin improvement. We continue to maintain a healthy balance sheet and debt maturity profile. At quarter end, we had combined cash and revolver availability of approximately $806 million and we were well within our financial covenants. Additionally, our revolver was fully paid down at the end of the quarter. The full balance sheet can be found on Slide 23 in the appendix. Turning to Slide 12. I want to take a moment to talk about our full year EBITDA margin, so everyone can see how macro forces we faced affected EBITDA margin. As you can see on the slide, our FY '22 full year EBITDA margin was 18.1% and that declined to 15.5% in FY '23. For the full year volume was a positive factor that added 40 basis points to margin. However, we also had approximately 70 basis points of margin dilution from unfavorable absorption in infrastructure due to lowering safety stock and from supply chain disruptions in Q1 in both segments. As we have been discussing this year in this high inflation environment, we have been covering cost inflation with price on a dollar basis. The net effect of this is a 120 basis points of margin dilution for the full year. Additionally, lower pension income and a stronger dollar were 60 basis points and 10 basis points dilutive respectively. In total, the macro forces of price over inflation, foreign exchange and lower pension income accounted for approximately 190 basis points of margin dilution in FY '23. Looking ahead to FY '24, we expect the headwinds from pension income, unfavorable foreign exchange and cost inflation to moderate. Additionally, we do not expect supply chain initiatives to be as disruptive going forward, and we will continue to execute on our commercial and operational excellence initiatives to grow the business and increase profitability. So let's turn to Slide 13 to review our FY '24 outlook. We are providing an outlook for both full year and the first quarter. Beginning with the first quarter. We expect first quarter sales to be between $485 million and $510 million with volume ranging from negative 5% to flat. Price realization of approximately 3% and with neutral foreign exchange effects. Let me share some detail on the sales assumptions underlying the Q1 outlook. Our Q1 range reflects a seasonal decline that is slightly greater than our historical average. On top of a seasonal decline last year that was better than our historical average. The decline reflects our expectation that the energy and general engineering markets will continue to perform at the lower level we saw in Q4 and that the recovery in China remains slow. We expect the current inflationary environment to persist, but at a moderating pace. We expect a raw material headwind of $8 million due to pricing ahead of raw materials in Q1 of the prior year. Foreign exchange and non-cash pension income are expected to be neutral to earnings per share. Interest expense is assumed to be approximately $7 million and an effective tax rate of approximately 5%, which includes a one-time discrete items which is driving the lower first quarter rate. We expect adjusted EPS in the range of $0.30 to $0.40. Turning to Slide 14 regarding our full year outlook. We expect FY '24 sales to be between $2.1 billion and $2.2 billion, with volume ranging from down 2% to up 3%. I want to spend a moment to review the volume assumptions in this outlook in more detail. For the full year, as I just mentioned, the moderation in growth we experienced exiting FY '23 is anticipated to continue at that level into the first quarter of FY '24. We expect growth to accelerate as the year progresses with second half growth outpacing the first half driven by improving conditions in the energy, general engineering and transportation end markets and an improvement in China. For the full year we expect aerospace and defense volume to remain strong. Energy and transportation to moderately increase with general engineering and earthworks flattish. Based on current tungsten prices, we expect net price realization of 3% with our inflationary pricing actions, partially offset by lower prices for customers with index pricing due to higher material content. We expect foreign exchange to be neutral. From a cost perspective, we expect the current inflationary environment to persist into FY '24, but it is assumed to moderate. We expect price to offset raw material, wage and general cost increases on a dollar basis. As a result of pricing ahead of raw materials in Q1 of the prior year, we anticipate raw material cost to negatively affect Q1 by approximately $8 million. In addition, our FY '24 outlooks reflects the current pricing level for tungsten. The Q2 effectiveness is an approximate $10 million headwind assuming this pricing level remains constant in the second half of FY '24, we will begin to benefit from lower material costs in Q4. Collectively, these headwinds are primarily affecting our Infrastructure segment. Foreign exchange and non-cash pension income are expected to be neutral to earnings per share. Approximately $15 million of savings from our previously announced restructuring initiatives has been included, and we expect it to be realized more in the second half of the year. We remain on target to achieve an annualized run rate of approximately $20 million at the end of FY '24. Depreciation and amortization is expected to be approximately $135 million and we expect interest expense of approximately $28 million and an effective tax rate for the full year of approximately 24%. We expect adjusted EPS to be in the range of $1.75 to $2.15. On the cash side, the full year outlook for capital expenditures is $100 million to $110 million and the outlook for primary working capital is 30% to 32%. Taken together, we continue to expect free operating cash flow at approximately 100% of adjusted net income in line with our long-term target. And with that, I'll turn it back over to Chris.