Thank you, Amie, and thank you, everyone, for joining us this morning. I want to start by recognizing and thanking Clay Williams for his leadership and his lasting impact on NOV. Clay served as NOV's CEO for over 10 years, but he helped build and shape this great organization and its incredible culture over nearly 30 years. As CEO, he led this company through some of the most challenging industry cycles while setting a high standard for integrity, perseverance and commitment to all of NOV's stakeholders. NOV is the great company it is today due to his exceptional leadership and all of us wish him the very best in retirement. Turning to our results. NOV delivered an outstanding fourth quarter to cap off a solid year, executing well in what continued to be a turbulent market environment. Fourth quarter revenue improved 5% sequentially but decreased 1% year-over-year against a global drilling activity decline of 6%. EBITDA was $267 million, up $9 million sequentially. For the full year, revenue decreased 1% to $8.74 billion and EBITDA exceeded $1 billion for the third straight year despite the challenging market environment. I'm proud of the way our team performed and pleased by the demonstrated resilience of our diverse portfolio of market-leading technologies. We achieved a full year book-to-bill of approximately 91% on a 15% increase in revenue out of backlog, and we ended the year with a total backlog of $4.34 billion. 2025 orders were led by demand for offshore production technologies, resulting in our offshore-related backlog growing more than 10% during the year, supported by demand for subsea flexible pipe offshore construction equipment and processing modules. Strong demand for offshore equipment and solid execution on our backlog more than offset lower demand for aftermarket parts and services from our offshore drilling contractor customers, leading our Energy Equipment segment to post its fourth straight year of revenue growth and margin improvement. Energy Equipment's strong performance mostly offset a 4% decrease in revenue from our shorter-cycle, more North America land-weighted Energy Products and Services segment. Rodney will provide more color on operating unit performance, but both segments performed well in a challenging market due to continued efforts to drive additional efficiencies and process improvements. Those efforts enabled us to reach our second consecutive year of converting over 85% of our EBITDA to cash, resulting in $876 million in free cash flow in 2025 and $1.8 billion in free cash flow over the last 2 years. Today, NOV is entering 2026 in a position of strength. We have strong market positions in almost everything we do, a fortress balance sheet, and we have what I believe is the best team of people in the industry. They believe in our mission to lower the marginal cost of energy production and help deliver reliable, affordable energy to the world. They also take great pride in providing exceptional service for our customers and come to work every day with a continuous improvement mindset. While NOV is in a strong position, we see additional opportunities to drive value for our shareholders over the coming years. As we look forward, there are 2 simple overarching areas of emphasis on which we are focused. One, continue to drive operational efficiencies; and two, lean into the many growth avenues we have in front of us. NOV has done a significant amount of heavy lifting over the last 10 years, actions that were needed to navigate through the repercussions of the November 2014 oil price war, the global pandemic and the dramatic shift from investments in offshore activity to U.S. shale. Our work included consolidating, repositioning and simplifying our business and improving operational and back-office efficiencies. This work continues today with our ongoing $100 million cost-out program, multiple facility consolidations and exiting underperforming product lines and geographic markets. While we are well beyond the low-hanging fruit, we still have opportunities to drive efficiencies, grow margins and increase return on capital, and we are accelerating the pace and increasing the scope of our efforts. As we drive efficiency and productivity gains, they are being offset by lower activity levels, tariffs and inflation. Still, we are driving more change to make the organization better every day, and our work is positioning NOV to outperform over the long run. There are many indications of the progress we are making with a number of our operations achieving record performance, some of which Rodney will highlight. We also see progress in numerous KPIs we measure and benchmark in our businesses, including cost of quality, which measures warranty, scrap and rework rates. We've seen significant improvement in this area over the last few years. And today, most of our operations are well within the top quartile of performance. Benchmark not only against oilfield equipment companies, but also leading industrial manufacturing peers. This also shows up in recognition from our customers, such as our subsea flexible pipe business receiving their top customers Best Supplier of the Year award for the third consecutive year. We've also driven improvements in health and safety KPIs such as total recordable incident rate and lost time incident rate over the last few years. Better HSE performance means our employees return home from work safely and in good health. Additionally, we are convinced that strong HSE performance reflects a culture that has pride, accountability and ownership in its operations, which translates into higher quality, reduced downtime and better service for our customers. Another sign of operational and process efficiency is our cash conversion cycle, which has benefited from the work we've done to improve all facets of our operational processes. We exited 2025 with a cash conversion cycle of 119 days and a working capital to revenue run rate of less than 22%, down from 143 days and 28.8%, respectively, in 2023, freeing up around $630 million of cash. While we will continue to focus on optimizing our portfolio, lowering costs, improving margins and driving efficiencies to increase return on capital, the actions we are taking also enhance our ability to lean more aggressively into both organic and M&A growth opportunities. We've always been disciplined in our allocation of capital. But over the past few years, we significantly raised the hurdle related to our criteria for acquisitions. In 2025, we did not complete a single acquisition. It's not that we're no longer interested in pursuing acquisitions. We've just set a much higher standard for them. For us to pursue an acquisition, it should fit within 1 of 3 categories: one, core business technology bolt-on, meaning a business or a technology that replaces or supplements a current core offering: two, direct consolidation opportunities; and three, larger acquisitions that already have scale, competitive advantage and compelling growth prospects. Any acquisition must also be accretive to our margins, earnings, cash flow and return on capital. Also, the more efficient our internal processes are, the better we are able to leverage NOV's global manufacturing, supply chain, marketing and other functions to improve profitability and grow the acquired business, making our case for investment more compelling. We expect all of our businesses to be leaders in what they do. We must either be a top 3 player in the market or have a compelling strategy and path for how we get there. If we do not have an achievable path, we will plan to exit the line of business. Today, we are a top 3 player in most everything we do. The combination of technology leadership, exceptional service and scale can be self-perpetuating, driving market leadership and additional growth opportunities. Complacency kills, and we will not lose sight of the continuous need to invest in product development and innovation. The success we are having with our new products and technologies is driving increases in market share and additional growth opportunities become even more compelling with the type of market we see emerging in late '26 and into 2027. Our objective is not growth for growth's sake, it is about value creation. We will invest in areas where we have clear competitive advantages, high barriers to entry, technology differentiation and a high likelihood of outsized market growth, all of which would be expected to result in investments that are accretive to margins and return on capital and drive value for our shareholders. Our market outlook naturally informs how we think about deploying capital, and 2026 will likely continue to provide a challenging market environment. However, our mid- to longer-term outlook is compelling. The current consensus view is that the oil market is currently oversupplied by between 2 million to 3 million barrels a day. This is due to an oil supply wave coming from OPEC's unwinding of production cuts and from pandemic era non-OPEC FIDs that are now coming online. Despite the excess supply, oil prices are holding up reasonably well due to geopolitical risk and increased storage capacity in Asia. However, with OECD inventories at the high end of their 5-year range and total global inventories that appear to be at their highest levels since 2021, there's downside risk to commodity prices. As a result, we are seeing customers take a cautious approach to the start of 2026, but we expect oil markets will start coming back into balance in the second half of the year, driving higher levels of customer spend and setting up a much healthier market in 2027 and beyond. Overall, we expect global industry spend and drilling activity to decline slightly year-over-year. In the U.S., we expect activity to be down mid-single digits year-over-year due primarily to the low activity exit rate from 2025 and further declines in oil-directed activity that will be offset by higher activity in gas basins. Slightly longer term, we expect U.S. short-cycle activity to remain sensitive to price signals, resulting in a modest recovery in activity by late 2026 and early 2027. We believe fiscal discipline among operators due in part to concerns related to depth and quality of drilling inventories and the state of the service complex's asset base will constrain activity growth. Capacity has moved overseas and attrition from the wear and tear of equipment operating 24/7 has taken its toll. Any increase in activity levels will likely require a disproportionate amount of demand for capital equipment, creating a compelling market opportunity for NOV. Longer term, we expect U.S. activity to realize modest but consistent growth to maintain a long production plateau as unconventional basins continue to mature. In international markets, we expect activity will be flat to up slightly in 2026, driven by rigs going back to work in Saudi Arabia and by the expansion of unconventional activity in international markets. This increase in unconventional activity throughout the Middle East, Latin America and Australia will continue to drive investments in the high-spec drilling, completion and production equipment needed to efficiently develop these resources, almost all of which NOV provides. Additionally, we see meaningful potential in Venezuela for us to help get the industry back on its feet over the longer term. This will require significant investments in capital equipment. NOV has a long and proud history in the country that began back in 1949. We employed over 450 people there before we had to shut down our operations. Since then, we have continued to sell equipment and spare parts to support major IOCs Venezuelan operations. And just over the past several weeks, we've received new orders with a value that exceeds the total amount of revenue we've generated during the past several years while supporting this operator's activity in the country. Given our history operating in the country, we will quickly ramp up support for our customers when it becomes appropriate to do so. Moving to the offshore markets. First, I'll talk briefly about what we see in the construction space, then cover production and drilling markets. NOV is a leading provider of critical cranes and deck machinery for drilling rigs, offshore support vessels, or OSVs, cable and pipe lay vessels and wind turbine installation vessels or WTIVs. Demand for new WTIVs has been soft, impacted by cost inflation, supply chain pressures and higher borrowing costs for developers. While we booked 1 order in 2025, the outlook for offshore wind has deteriorated with the latest forecast for turbine capacity additions through 2030 down over 35% since this time last year. As a result, offshore wind contractors are cautious and there is poor visibility into future orders. However, demand for cable lay vessels needed to connect power from the still growing number of offshore turbines to shore has remained solid with 2 orders in 2025, including 1 in the fourth quarter. We expect this level of demand to continue through 2026 with longer-term demand contingent on the ultimate pace of offshore wind development. We're seeing strong demand for our offshore cranes with our operation reaching its highest level of revenue in over 10 years. This demand has been led by operators of OSVs, where the average age of the global fleet is now almost 20 years, approaching a typical 25-year life and giving us confidence that demand will remain solid over the coming years. Turning to offshore production and drilling equipment. Industry forecasts suggest 2026 will be another year of lower spending, down low to mid-single digits. While we do not disagree with this view, the market is nuanced, and we believe the offshore market is rapidly nearing the beginning of a strong extended up cycle. Over the past decade, the offshore industry has fundamentally changed. Improved project execution, greater standardization, industrialization of infrastructure and better technology have materially lowered breakeven costs. NOV's drilling and production technologies have contributed to this emerging renaissance. Our automation packages, digital solutions and other equipment have improved drilling efficiencies. And the industrialization we've applied to building gas and fluid processing modules for FPSOs has helped lower costs. Additionally, operators are now benefiting from artificial intelligence using the latest processor chips that enable quicker iterations and better subsurface interpretations to reduce time, risk and costs associated with deepwater exploration. All of this has meaningfully improved offshore economics with breakevens in many areas now falling below $40 per barrel. Lower costs, along with a growing need to offset structural production declines are increasingly positioning long-cycle offshore barrels to supplant short-cycle North America shale as a source of incremental supply, supply that is needed to feed the world's growing demand for energy and which will reinvigorate offshore exploration. We're already seeing many IOCs planning to significantly increase their deepwater exploration budgets in the coming years, some by as much as 50%. In the offshore production space, we are leaders in providing most of the critical components outside of power and compression for FPSOs and mobile offshore production units. We also provide mooring and fluid transfer systems and other equipment for FLNG projects. 2025 was a massive year for deliveries of FPSOs with 15 vessels starting operations, many for projects sanctioned before the pandemic. Only 5 new FPSO FIDs advanced during the year, while others were postponed due to higher costs, supply constraints and macroeconomic uncertainties. Over the last year, operators and suppliers have been working together to lower upfront capital costs by evolving designs of large FPSOs to smaller to midsized units optimized for average anticipated field production rather than maximum throughput. The projects are now starting to move forward. In 2026, we see the potential for up to 10 FPSO FIDs and expect demand to remain strong with an average of 8 FIDs per year through 2030. Notably, while we expect the average size of FPSOs to decrease, we see a higher proportion of FPSOs destined for gassier markets in harsher environments, which plays into NOV's strength in gas and condensate processing and in quick disconnect turret mooring systems. Lastly, in offshore drilling markets, we are seeing green shoots with growing indications that the white space for our offshore drilling contractors is beginning to shrink. Our customers are seeing an increase in the pace of contracting and the average duration of new contracts is increasing significantly, which we believe reflects building momentum for long-term offshore developments. From September 2025 through January 2026, there have been 59 floater contracts awarded in comparison to only 33 during the same period last year. Additionally, as of year-end 2025, public open tenders for all offshore rigs reflected approximately 30% more minimum rig days relative to open tenders at year-end 2024. That number increases to over 100% if you consider only open tenders for floating rigs. While most new contracts are scheduled to begin in 2027, our offshore contract drilling customers typically call us as soon as contracts are signed to begin preparing rigs to go back to work. This drives demand for service and repairs, spare parts, recertifications and capital equipment upgrades. We've now realized 2 straight quarters of increased spare part bookings and expect orders to improve further in the second half of the year. We also believe the stage is set for an extended recovery as the call on production from deepwater increases, driving the industry to get back to work. We're extremely excited about NOV's future and the market environment we see unfolding over the next several years. We performed well in 2025, reflecting the strength of the diversity in our portfolio and the great work our team is doing to execute well in a tough environment. Rodney?