Good evening, and thank you for joining us. Let me start with what's on everyone's mind. Last week, our stock sold off seemingly because investors decided AI is coming for insurance. They're right. They just have the direction of the trade completely wrong. Neptune isn't threatened by AI disruption. We are AI disruption. We have been since the day we wrote our first policy. We have no legacy system to rip out. We have no army of manual underwriters to replace. We built this company as an AI-powered API-first platform from scratch, proprietary machine learning models running pricing, underwriting, portfolio management and distribution across the largest private flood data set in the United States. Let me be specific about what that means, the data moat. Over years of underwriting and servicing hundreds of thousands of policies, we have assembled proprietary flood risk data, behavioral retention data, claims performance insights and real-time transaction signals that no competitor can replicate by simply plugging in a large language model. In an AI-driven world, the model is a commodity. The data is the moat. We have the data. The results. Our underwriting performance hasn't just been good. It has been so good that capacity providers are fighting to get on our platform. We grew from 23 to 40 capacity partners this year, a 74% increase, now supporting 8 programs. And because those partners have seen hundreds of millions of dollars in underwriting profit flow through Neptune, our average commission rate increased 35 basis points year-over-year. That's not us negotiating harder. That's the market telling us our AI works. Where we sit? Before I explain why AI is a tailwind for us, it's worth clarifying how Neptune actually reaches the end customer because I think some of the confusion starts here. We are a managing general agent. We sit between the capacity providers who take the risk and the distribution channel that reach the policyholder. We do not own large captive agency forces. We reach customers 2 ways, through a network of independent agents and wholesale partners and through direct-to-consumer digital channels. Both flow through the same platform. That distinction matters because when AI reduces the cost of distribution, that savings flows directly to Neptune's bottom line. We are not disrupting ourselves. The distribution upside. Here's the part that I think is most misunderstood. Agent commissions are our single largest expense line. If AI-driven workflows reduce friction in how consumers buy flood insurance and they will, that is not a threat to Neptune. That is margin expansion for Neptune. We already support both agent-led and fully digital flows on the same platform. If every customer in America decides tomorrow that they want to buy flood insurance through an AI agent instead of a human one, we are ready. And our adjusted EBITDA margin goes from an already exceptional 60% to something significantly higher. The team. I'd like everyone to look at who actually works here because it tells you what kind of company this is. Over 40% of Neptune's employees are engineers or data scientists. This is not an insurance company experimenting with AI. This is an AI company that happens to be in insurance. And that composition shows up in the numbers. In 2025, trailing 12-month revenue per employee increased 15% to $2.7 million and adjusted EBITDA per employee increased 14% to $1.6 million. For context, our revenue per employee puts us between Apple and NVIDIA. These are not insurance company metrics. Those are elite technology platform metrics made possible because of AI. I want to be honest about something. Nobody knows exactly how AI will reshape this industry. We could be wrong about the pace, the path or the specifics. But if the question is who is best positioned to adapt, we like our answer. We are already building with the latest tools. We are already operating at the cutting edge and our entire infrastructure was designed to evolve. If the future belongs to AI, and we believe it does, we would rather be the company that was built for it than the one trying to catch up. Technology, capacity, distribution. Those are the 3 moats around this company, and we expect every one of them to get deeper as AI adoption accelerates. Now let me talk you through the quarter. The fourth quarter was an outstanding finish to a record year for Neptune. It showcased the stability of our platform, the strength of our execution and the durability of our business model. During the quarter, we successfully launched new capacity programs, delivered record new business sales and scaled our technology seamlessly to meet elevated demand, all while maintaining strong margins and operational discipline. Our first full quarter as a public company built directly on the momentum that brought us here and capped an exceptional year. A few highlights from the quarter include revenue of $43.8 million, a 39% increase year-over-year, net income of $4.3 million at a 10% margin, down 63% from the fourth quarter of 2024, with adjusted net income of $15.3 million, up 25% from the fourth quarter of 2024. Adjusted EBITDA of $25.9 million, up 34% year-over-year at a 59% margin, written premium of $100.3 million, driving 33% year-over-year premium in force growth and record new business sales posted during the quarter. The strength of the fourth quarter capped an exciting and record-setting year. For the full year 2025, Neptune delivered revenue of $159.6 million, up 34% from 2024. Net income of $37.4 million at a 23% margin, up 8% from 2024 and adjusted net income of $56.9 million, up 38%. Full year adjusted EBITDA of $95 million, up 32% year-over-year at a 60% margin, giving us a Rule of 40 of 93. Year-end premium in force was approximately $370 million, reflecting over $90 million of net growth during the year. And as a reminder, because this is central to understanding the business, Neptune takes no balance sheet insurance risk, 0. We are an asset-light platform that earns commissions and fees on every policy written and renewed. That model is what allows us to scale at 60% EBITDA margins without taking catastrophe exposure onto our books. Now profitability and technology get a lot of the attention, and they should. But I wanted to spend a moment on something that doesn't always show up in the model, how we performed when it mattered most. During the fourth quarter, the federal government shut down and the National Flood Insurance Program or NFIP went dark. That is the primary source of flood insurance for most Americans, and it was unavailable. While the NFIP was shut down, our platform kept quoting, kept binding and kept onboarding new agents who needed somewhere to send their customers. We made targeted disciplined decisions to support our agent partners during the disruption, including incentives that contributed to record new business sales with minimal impact to margins. That is the kind of moment that cements relationships. Agents remember who showed up. I also want to highlight a structural advantage of our market that I think is underappreciated. Flood insurance pricing is not subject to the reinsurance cycle volatility that whipsaws other property and casualty lines. The NFIP sets its rate statutorily. And as the dominant market alternative, that creates a stable pricing environment around which we can underwrite with confidence. In 2025, we retained 98% of premium. That retention rate tells you 2 things. Our pricing is competitive and our policyholders are staying. The results we delivered this year reflect a model that is working, technology, data, capacity, distribution and execution all compounding together. We enter 2026 with real momentum and confidence in our ability to continue building value long term. I'll now turn things over to Matt Duffy, our President and Chief Risk Officer, to discuss business updates.