Thanks, Tom and thank you all for joining us today. We are pleased with our strong finish to the year, which came in above our outlook driven by better-than-expected revenue growth, earnings, and cash flow. In what remains an uneven environment, we are operating from a position of strength and executing well. Our fourth quarter results put a capstone on what was a strong year for Kontoor Brands. Global revenue increased 5%. Relative to our prior outlook, we saw stronger results in the U.S. and Asia, with Europe performing as anticipated. By brand, Wrangler global revenue increased 9%. Strength was broad-based with growth in every channel and geography, including 9% growth in both the U.S. and international, 9% growth in wholesale and D2C, 19% growth in Female, and 29% growth in Outdoor. We were encouraged by the strength we saw in POS during the holiday season. Despite uneven performance month-to-month, as has been the case over the past year, we saw continued strength in overall sell-through performance at retail. October increased at a low single-digit rate, with November and December accelerating meaningfully to 8% growth on a combined basis. This was the strongest POS performance in over a year, reflecting the brand momentum discussed earlier. Now turning to Lee. Global revenue decreased 5%, U.S. revenue decreased 6%, driven by a decline in wholesale partially offset by double-digit growth in D2C. Lee's performance was below our expectations as challenges in the mid-tier channel pressured wholesale revenue more than anticipated. Additionally, during the fourth quarter, Lee revenue was negatively impacted by approximately three percentage points from the exit from the club channel. We are evolving Lee's go-to-market strategy in areas that are misaligned with the brand's strategy and consumer insights work. While these decisions may have a near-term impact on revenue, they will result in greater consistency and performance for both our wholesale partners and our own D2C channels long-term. Partially offsetting the decline in wholesale was an improvement in D2C, including strong double-digit growth in the fourth quarter, which we expect to continue in 2025. In the first quarter, Lee's digital business is up 7% quarter to date. Lee international revenue decreased 4%, with declines in wholesale offsetting growth in D2C. In Europe, revenue declined 1%. Growth in D2C, including 17% growth in digital, was offset by declines in wholesale. Performance was generally consistent with expectations as the uneven macro environment continues to weigh on retailer behavior. In APAC, revenue decreased 4%. Performance was modestly better than we expected. Recall last quarter we tempered our outlook for the region as a result of more challenging operating conditions. We will continue to manage the business prudently in light of the environment. However, we are encouraged by the modest improvement in performance of the region over the past few months. 2025 will be a transition year for Lee as we work to set a stronger foundation for the brand and reposition it for growth and improved fundamentals. We are confident our consumer-driven strategy will strengthen the brand and expect the performance of the business to improve as we move through 2025. Moving to the remainder of the P&L, adjusted gross margin expanded 160 basis points to 44.7%, driven by the benefits of lower input costs and mix. This was partially offset by the targeted pricing actions included in our plan. Adjusted SG&A expense was $211 million, up 5% compared to the prior year, driven by investments and demand creation and volume-related variable expenses. And adjusted earnings for share was $1.38, representing an increase of 2% compared to the prior year. Excluding the discrete tax benefit in the prior year, adjusted EPS increased 23%. Now turning to the balance sheet. Inventory decreased 22% to $390 million. We achieved our annual turnover target of approximately 3.5 times and our days on hand goal of approximately 100 days. While we anticipate inventory to grow in line with sales going forward, networking capital management, cash generation, and return on invested capital will remain a top priority. We finished the year with net debt for long-term debtless cash of $406 million and $334 million of cash on hand. Our net leverage ratio or net debt divided by trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA was 1.0 times at the low end of our targeted range. During the fourth quarter, we paused share repurchase activity in anticipation of our acquisition of Helly Hansen. We have $215 million remaining under our current authorization. Our board approved a regular quarterly cash dividend of $0.52 per share. And during 2024, we returned $198 million to shareholders through share repurchases and dividends. Finally, on a trailing 12-month basis, our adjusted return on invested capital was 32%, representing an increase of 550 basis points compared to the prior year. Before moving to our outlook, let me discuss two topics I know are top of mind, Project Jeanius and tariffs. Starting with Project Jeanius. When we launched our transformation program, the goal was to create investment capacity to drive accelerated growth, improve profitability, and returns on capital. As we've discussed, Project Jeanius will result in significant gross and operating margin expansion and allow for a step change in investment to fuel the next leg of our value creation journey. As Scott highlighted, we now see total run rate savings in excess of $100 million for the Jeanius program. In 2025, we anticipate a benefit of approximately $30 million before reinvestment. The first half of 2025 will primarily benefit from SG&A savings related to operational efficiencies and improvements within indirect procurement. The second half of the year will include the added savings from supply chain initiatives that will contribute to our gross margin expansion. Unpacking this in more detail, we expect Project Jeanius to benefit full year gross margin by approximately 10 to 20 basis points. Savings will be primarily driven by optimizing our sourced versus internally manufactured product. We have performed a deep skew level analysis and expect these savings to ramp meaningfully starting in the second half of 2025 and into 2026. As a result, the majority of the supply chain related savings will occur in the second half of the year, most heavily weighted towards the fourth quarter. SG&A will benefit by approximately $20 million in 2025. Savings will be generated primarily from indirect procurement and improved organizational design and other operational and go-to-market efficiencies. We plan to reinvest over half of these savings to support our 2025 growth initiatives, including incremental demand creation and brand equity campaigns, channel and geographic expansion, and product development and consumer insight capabilities. Net of reinvestment, we expect Project Jeanius to benefit 2025 operating income by $10 million to $15 million. As we move into 2026, we expect Project Jeanius savings to mature to a full run rate in excess of $100 million, providing us with a higher level of investment capacity to further support accelerated growth, expand profitability, and returns on capital. Moving to tariffs. Approximately 25% of our expected 2025 U.S. production volume originates from Mexico. Our China exposure is immaterial as the sourcing we do from China is directly for China. While the situation remains fluid, we have evaluated a range of potential outcomes and have developed a robust set of scenarios and mitigating actions should tariffs prove to be more permanent. Should tariffs be implemented in March at the proposed 25% level on all imports from Mexico, the unmitigated impact to operating profit in 2025 is approximately $50 million. This assumes no mitigating actions, including transferring production within our global supply chain, pricing increases, changes to foreign currency, or other proactive mitigating cost actions. We would expect the mitigated impact in 2025 to be below $50 million and would work to largely offset any potential impact of tariffs more fully in 2026. We have experienced supply chain shocks in the past, including cotton spikes, supply chain and ocean freight disruption, and inflation. While we are not immune to these events, over a near-term window we are confident we can largely offset the impact of tariffs within a 12 to 18-month period. Now turning to our outlook. Our outlook excludes the expected revenue, earnings, and cash flow contribution from Helly Hansen and any potential impact from tariffs as just discussed. Full-year revenue is expected to increase 1% to 3% and includes an approximate 1% headwind from the stronger U.S. dollar. Our outlook for 2025 also includes the impact of a 53rd week, which is not expected to meaningfully impact revenue on a full-year basis. Our revenue outlook includes the following assumptions. First, we continue to plan the business conservatively and assume no meaningful improvement in retail inventory positions for the year. While inventory levels at retail remain suboptimal, the environment is uncertain, and our retail partners remain in a conservative posture with regard to inventory management. This is consistent with our assumption in 2024. Second, relative to our expectations 120 days ago, our outlook embeds an approximate 100 basis point incremental headwind from foreign currency. This will have an equal impact on first and second half revenue growth. Third, the impact of Lee's evolving strategy and distribution footprint and the amount and timing of category expansions, distribution gains, and new programs for both brands has rebalanced revenue growth to be more equally weighted between the first and second halves. And finally, after an encouraging start to the year, POS trends have softened over the last four to six weeks. January POS increased 4%, and we gained approximately 100 basis points of market share. February POS has declined at a low single-digit rate as a result of weather disruption and more subdued consumer spending as a result of macro uncertainty. Based on the visibility we have, we believe the recent slowdown in February POS is across brands and categories in our largest points of distribution and not specific to Wrangler and Lee. As I mentioned earlier, we have seen month-to-month variability over the last year and are planning the business prudently in light of recent trends. For the first half of 2025, we expect low single-digit revenue growth, including the approximate 100 basis point incremental impact from foreign currency and the factors I just discussed. For the first quarter, we expect revenue of approximately $625 million. Our first quarter outlook reflects quarter-to-date trends as well as the impact of seasonal programs and distribution expansion that are more heavily weighted to the second quarter. For the full year, the low end of our revenue outlook assumes a low single-digit decline in POS for the balance of the year based on the softness we have experienced in February. The high end of our revenue outlook assumes POS trends that are more consistent with the performance we have experienced over the last 6 to 12 months. While the composition and phasing of our revenue plan for 2025 has evolved differently, there is no change to our growth outlook for 2025 on a constant currency basis relative to 120 days ago. More specifically, stronger FX headwinds and softer POS trends to start the year have been offset by greater-than-expected new distribution and category expansion primarily in the Wrangler brand. Moving to gross margin, we expect adjusted gross margin of 45.3% to 45.5%. Our outlook represents an increase of approximately 20 to 40 basis points compared to adjusted gross margin of 45.1% in 2024. We have a high degree of confidence in our ability to continue to expand gross margin supported by Project Jeanius and the benefits of structural mix, partially offset by product cost inflation. Gross margin is expected to be weighted to the second half of the year driven by the scaling benefits of Project Jeanius. We expect first half gross margin to expand approximately 10 to 20 basis points compared to prior year. For the first quarter, we expect gross margin of 46% for an increase of approximately 30 basis points compared to prior year. SG&A is expected to increase at a low single-digit rate on an adjusted basis. We expect to make investments in areas such as demand creation, product development, and D2C and international expansion. This will be partially offset by the benefits of Project Jeanius and prudent discretionary spending. EPS is expected to be in the range of $5.20 to $5.30, representing an increase of 6% to 8%. Full-year EPS does not include the benefit of share repurchases as a result of the pending acquisition of Helly Hansen. Our outlook also does not yet reflect the expected revenue, earnings, and cash flow contribution from Helly. Assuming a closing during the second quarter of 2025, we anticipate approximately $0.15 of accretion to the full-year 2025 adjusted earnings per share. This outlook does not include any benefit from potential synergies. We expect first half EPS growth to be consistent with our full-year 2025 outlook. We expect first quarter EPS of approximately $1.16. Finally, we expect another year of strong cash generation. Cash from operations is anticipated to exceed $300 million, reflecting the cash-generative nature of our business. Our outlook does not include the contribution from Helly Hansen or the meaningful networking capital opportunity we discussed last week. Before opening it up for questions, I'd like to reiterate the confidence we have in our ability to deliver our 2025 objectives. We have multiple paths to drive increasing revenue and operating earnings growth. The benefits of strong fundamentals, Project Jeanius, and the addition of Helly Hansen are a powerful combination. While the environment remains dynamic, we have a strong operating model that has proven resilient regardless of market conditions. I am highly confident in the strength of our team and the power of our enhanced TSR model and our ability to drive best-in-class returns in the years ahead. This concludes our prepared remarks, and I'll now turn the call back to the operator.