Thanks, Eric, and good morning, everyone. In the fourth quarter, sales of $249.1 million decreased 8.4% and organic sales declined 9% driven primarily by lower results in the AST segment due to ongoing softness in semiconductor. The decrease also reflects lower results in the Sealing Technologies segment, where we saw a sharp decline in the commercial vehicle OEM market and lower demand in general industrial, commercial aerospace and pharma markets. As a reminder, we posted very strong results in Sealing in the fourth quarter of last year. Fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA of $46.9 million decreased roughly 12% compared to the prior year period, and adjusted EBITDA margin of 18.8% decreased 80 basis points year-over-year. Volume declines just noted were partially offset by strategic pricing, cost mitigation and continuous improvement initiatives. Results for the quarter were also adversely affected by $6.4 million of incremental long-term incentive compensation expense tied to our strong share price performance during the fourth quarter. By comparison, in the fourth quarter of 2022, share price-driven long-term incentive compensation expense was $4.8 million. We do not contemplate compensation expenses related to share price changes when determining guidance. As such, the incremental long-term compensation expense of $6.4 million during the fourth quarter of 2023 was not considered when providing prior 2023 guidance commentary. Modifications made to the long-term incentive compensation program during 2023 will lessen this impact in 2024 and eliminate the impact in years thereafter. Corporate expenses of $14.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2023 were down from $15.6 million a year ago, primarily due to lower total compensation expense. Adjusted diluted earnings per share of $1.19, decreased 8.5% compared to the prior year period, largely because of the decline in adjusted EBITDA and partially offset by a 35% reduction in net interest expense driven by debt repayment during the year and higher interest income on cash balances. The previously noted $6.4 million share price-driven incentive compensation expense in Q4 equates to around $0.23 per share. Moving to a discussion of segment performance, Sealing Technologies sales of $147 million decreased 6.3%. During the quarter, we saw a sharp decline in commercial vehicle OEM sales, as well as softness in our general industrial, aerospace, pharma and commercial vehicle aftermarket demand. Softness in these markets was partially offset by strategic pricing actions and continued strength in nuclear energy. Excluding the impact of foreign currency translation and our divested business, sales decreased 7.5% in the quarter. For the fourth quarter, adjusted segment EBITDA decreased 6.3%, in-line with the sales decline, resulting in adjusted segment EBITDA margin being flat with last year. Excluding the impact of foreign exchange and divestitures, adjusted segment EBITDA decreased 7.9%. Sealing's margin performance through a sales decline reflects the benefits of strategic pricing actions, cost mitigation efforts and on-going 80:20 pruning across the segment. As Eric noted earlier, we are pleased with the progress made over the past few years in rationalizing the Sealing Technologies segment, and we will continue to invest and targeted growth opportunities, while maintaining cost discipline and continuous improvement. Turning to Advanced Surface Technologies, while we saw a sequential improvement from the third quarter, fourth quarter sales of $102.1 million decreased 11.5% over the prior year, driven by continued weakness in semiconductor capital equipment spending. Our Cleaning Solutions business tied to advanced node chip production was a bright spot in the quarter and throughout the year. We also saw stabilization in the optical filter business with improved profitability during the quarter. For the fourth quarter, adjusted segment EBITDA decreased approximately 21% versus the prior year period. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 22.4% improved sequentially and as Eric mentioned earlier, finished the year close to 24%. The volume decline in addition to mix, material cost increases and increased operating expenses supporting growth investments were the primary drivers of the year-over-year reduction in profitability, offset in part by cost mitigation efforts and pricing actions. We continue to invest in AST as the long-term growth opportunities in this segment far outweighed the recent market headwinds. The phased up-fit of our facility in Arizona is on-going and as Eric noted, we are expanding our capacity in Asia. We are well positioned to see a bright future ahead for this segment. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, our balance sheet remains very strong. Subsequent to quarter end, in late January, we closed the AMI acquisition using $210 million of cash. Our net leverage ratio, inclusive of the acquisition stands at approximately 2x 2023 adjusted EBITDA. With our reshaped portfolio, we continued to generate substantial cash. Free cash flow in 2023 was over $174 million compared to about $77 million in the prior year. Working capital management across the company and lower cash taxes were key drivers of cash flow during 2023, in addition to the stellar results in Sealing Technologies. We have strong financial flexibility to execute our strategic initiatives, both organically and through strategic acquisitions that broaden our capabilities. Our goal is to build upon our leading edge positions in markets with secular growth drivers that safeguard critical environments and applications that touch our lives every day. During 2023, we paid a $0.29 per share quarterly dividend, totaling $24.3 million for the year. On February 15, our Board approved another increase to the quarterly dividend to $0.30 per share, representing the ninth consecutive annual dividend increase since we initiated a quarterly dividend in 2015. Moving now to our 2024 guidance, taking into consideration all the factors that we know currently, we expect total Enpro sales growth to be in the low to mid-single digit range in 2024. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $260 million to $280 million and adjusted diluted earnings per share to range from $7 to $7.80 per share. The normalized tax rate used to calculate adjusted diluted earnings per share remains at 25% and fully diluted shares outstanding are approximately $21 million. Capital expenditures are expected to be approximately $60 million or around 5% of sales in 2024 as we continue to invest in compelling future growth opportunities across the company. Two-third of this capital spending for 2024 will be in support of growth investments on focused leading-edge platforms in the Advanced Surface Technologies segment. In AST, we expect continued demand in the first half – excuse me, we expect continued demand weakness in the first half of 2024 after seeing sequential improvement in AST in the fourth quarter of last year, based on current backlog in order patterns, we anticipate results to decline sequentially in the first quarter of this year. We believe the first quarter will represent the bottom of the semiconductor decline for our business, with adjusted EBITDA of about 5% to 10% below Q3 of last year. Capital spending typically lags unit growth after a trough and approximately two-third of our semi sales are driven by equipment builds with the remaining one-third tied to wafer production. We are well positioned when capacity utilization improves and capital spending recovers. In the Sealing Technologies segment, we anticipate normal seasonality to return this year resulting in incrementally stronger first half of the year compared to the second. The largest portion of segment revenue follows trends in global industrial production and North American commercial vehicle production, although we have growing exposure to faster-growing markets, such as aerospace and space, sustainable power generation and pharma. As Eric noted, the acquisition of AMI will be accretive to Sealing's results, both in the coming year and longer term. In commercial vehicle, the sharp decline in OEM demand anticipated this year is expected to be partially offset by improved aftermarket mix and new product advancements as the year progresses. According to industry forecasts Commercial vehicle trailer builds are expected to decline 25% in 2024. As a reminder, approximately one-third of our commercial vehicle market -- our commercial vehicle business is tied to OEM trailer builds with the balance serving the aftermarket. Also of note for the Sealing segment, in 2024, we expect a smaller impact from strategic pricing initiatives compared to 2023. We have made progress over the past several years optimizing and repositioning the Sealing Technologies segment, resulting in significant improvements in the composition and profitability of the segment. We're well positioned currently and we'll continue to invest in various pockets of growth while focusing on broadening the segment's capabilities with selecting organic moves overtime. We believe the timing of the upturn in our semiconductor business and to a lesser degree, the magnitude of the decline in commercial vehicle trailer builds, as well as trends in global industrial production will be the primary swing factors driving our performance in 2024. The mid to high end of our guidance range reflects a robust second half recovery in our semiconductor business, while the lower end reflects the possibility of the uptick happening later. Regardless of the precise timing, we are well positioned for the widely expected upturn, and we are making the appropriate investments to drive future growth and value. Now I'll turn the call back to Eric for a few closing comments.