Thank you, Tim, and good morning. Today, I'll review the fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial highlights and provide guidance for 2026. Our guidance reflects the combined organization, and consistent with past practice, excludes the impact of any future Fed rate decisions. In 2025, we executed on key strategic priorities. We announced and have now closed the Vista acquisition within 4 months, grew tangible book value by 10% and delivered a full year net interest margin of 3.94%. Fourth quarter's results were impacted by elevated provision expense and onetime items, including $4.1 million in after-tax acquisition costs and a $2.6 million after-tax loss on the strategic sale of investment securities to remain below $10 billion in assets at year-end. As a reminder, this action will preserve approximately $10 million in interchange income for 1 more year. Excluding onetime items, fourth quarter net income totaled $22.7 million or $0.60 of earnings per diluted share. As Tim shared, we addressed the specific set of problem loans during the quarter. This resulted in $9.1 million of provision expense related to charge-offs and specific reserves. For the full year 2025 on an adjusted basis, net income totaled $117.6 million or $3.06 of earnings per diluted share. Return on tangible assets was 1.3%, and return on tangible common equity was 12.2%. During 2025, we maintained a top quartile full year net interest margin of 3.94%, generated $1.6 billion of new loan originations, executed share buybacks and added to our robust capital base. We are pleased to have added a number of experienced bankers to our team through the Vista acquisition. We kick off the year with a combined loan portfolio of approximately $9.4 billion and are projecting 2026 loan growth to be approximately 10%. At acquisition closing, we added approximately $2.4 billion of earning assets from Vista to our balance sheet. As we optimize the total cash and investment portfolio mix, we project the combined bank to generate earning asset growth of 7% to 10% during 2026. Our goal is to hold approximately 15% of total assets in cash and investments and maintain a loan-to-deposit ratio of approximately 90%. Fully taxable equivalent net interest margin for the fourth quarter was 3.89% and was impacted by variable rate loans repricing well ahead of Fed rate cuts. However, we cut deposit rates in tandem with the Fed, creating a lag effect in our cost of deposits. Most of this has now worked its way through our balance sheet, and December's margin returned to a strong 3.97%. Similarly, Vista's December margin was 4%. As a result, we project 2026 fully taxable equivalent net interest margin to remain right around 4%, excluding the impact of future rate moves. Turning to credit. Our nonperforming asset ratio improved 11 basis points during 2025 to end the year at a low 36 basis points of total loans. The criticized loan ratio improved 73 basis points during the year. Net charge-offs were 34 basis points of loans for the year, and the allowance to total loans ratio ended the year at 1.18%, consistent with the prior quarter. We continue to hold $16.8 million of marks against our acquired loan portfolio as of December 31, providing an additional 23 basis points of loan loss coverage if applied across the NBH legacy loan book. We will be adding marks from Vista's loans during the first quarter of this year. We project the provision expense in 2026 to cover net charge-offs and new loan growth at a rate consistent with the current 1.2% allowance to total loans ratio. Fourth quarter noninterest income was $14.4 million and included $3.3 million in pretax securities losses. For 2026, we project total noninterest income to be in the range of $75 million to $80 million. Fourth quarter noninterest expense totaled $72.4 million, including $5.4 million of acquisition costs. Also included in the fourth quarter's expense were investments made in bankers in our resort markets. Full year noninterest expense was $265 million, including $7.2 million in acquisition costs and $22 million related to 2UniFi. For 2026, we project noninterest expense of $320 million to $330 million, reflecting a full year of Vista expenses. We project expenses during the first half of the year in the range of $165 million to $170 million. This means lower expenses in the back half of the year, reflecting cost savings from operational efficiencies generated by the combined organization following the completion of system integration. During 2026, we expect to incur onetime expenses associated with the acquisition and rebranding. In addition, we may recognize CECL day 1 provision expense depending on our final purchase accounting approach. As Tim shared, we are pleased to have completed the initial phase of 2UniFi in 2025 with the launch of our fully automated SBA loan offering last quarter. With the core technology infrastructure now in place, we expect a substantial reduction in capital expenditures for 2UniFi in 2026. This shift positions us to begin realizing operating leverage from the platform. For 2026, we expect $2 million to $4 million in 2UniFi revenue contribution, which is included in my fee income guidance. Importantly, we expect to maintain flat year-over-year 2UniFi expense, even with 2026 reflecting a full year of capitalized asset depreciation, which is approximately half of 2UniFi's 2026 expense. This means significantly lower cash spend in 2026. Turning to income taxes. The 2025 effective tax rate was 18%. With the integration of Vista and the resulting shift in the mix of taxable versus nontaxable income, we expect our effective tax rate to be approximately 20% for 2026. Capital levels remain strong, and we continue to grow our excess capital. We ended the year with a TCE ratio of 11%, Tier 1 leverage ratio of 11.6% and a strong common equity Tier 1 ratio of 14.9%. We project a 2026 share count of 45.8 million shares, reflecting the Vista-related share issuance. On a final note, bringing this all together, we believe we are well positioned to deliver earnings in excess of $1 per share in the fourth quarter of 2026, which sets the stage for full year earnings exceeding $4 per share in 2027. With that, I'll turn the call over to John Steinmetz.