Walter S. Hulse
Thank you, Pierce. I will start with a brief overview of our fourth quarter and full-year financial performance and then move on to our 2026 guidance. Fourth quarter net income attributable to ONEOK, Inc. totaled $977,000,000 or $1.55 per share, and totaled $3,390,000,000 for the full year, representing a 12% increase compared with 2024 and resulting in earnings of $5.42 per share. Adjusted EBITDA totaled $2,150,000,000 in the fourth quarter of 2025, and more than $8,000,000,000 for the full year. Full-year results included $65,000,000 of transaction costs. During the quarter, we retired more than $1,750,000,000 in senior notes through a combination of redemptions and repurchases. Fourth quarter activity brought our full-year total to nearly $3,100,000,000 of long-term debt extinguished. In 2025, we returned nearly $2,700,000,000 to shareholders through a combination of dividends and share repurchases. We also recently increased our quarterly dividend by 4%, further reinforcing that commitment. As we progress towards our long-term leverage target of 3.5x or lower, we continue to gain flexibility in how we deploy capital. Now moving on to guidance. For 2026, we expect net income at a midpoint of approximately $3,450,000,000 or $5.45 per diluted share and an adjusted EBITDA midpoint of approximately $8,100,000,000. On page seven of our investor deck, we have provided a bridge analysis from original 2025 guidance issued in February 2025 to year-end 2025 and then a bridge to 2026 guidance. To preempt some of the questions we expect to get on this chart, I plan to walk through each column in the chart to give a brief explanation. The 2025 guidance was first impacted by lower Bakken volume growth that resulted in gathered volumes being 100,000,000 cubic feet per day lower than originally anticipated. This change in drilling pace began in 2025 when crude oil prices dropped from the $70s to the lower $60s range. We also experienced a reduction in anticipated NGL volumes when two third-party plants were delayed in 2025. The second column in the chart reflects a $125,000,000 reduction in lower upgrade margin in our NGL and refined products businesses. An example of this would be the narrowing of ARBOB-to-butane spreads in our blending business. On the positive side, we enjoyed strong location differentials such as the Waha-to-Katy spread in our natural gas pipeline segment. These differentials added approximately $150,000,000 to EBITDA in 2025. The majority of the $85,000,000 of other income reflected on the chart is the gain realized on debt repurchases made throughout the year. On a comparative basis, excluding transaction costs, we ended 2025 with EBITDA of $8,085,000,000 compared to our original 2025 guidance of $8,225,000,000. Looking forward to 2026, we see $100,000,000 of EBITDA growth from increased volumes in the Permian and the full year of third-party Permian plant volumes that were delayed in 2025. The $100,000,000 increase is net of other impacts such as contract rollovers, and the 18,000 barrels per day of Continental NGLs rolling off our Rocky Mountain region volumes this year we have previously discussed. We expect asset optimization to add $150,000,000 of EBITDA from batching and blending logistical benefits, allowing us to efficiently move NGLs and refined products through the Easton acquisition, connections between Mont Belvieu and East Houston, and other synergy projects completed throughout the Mid-Continent NGL and refined products businesses. The $150,000,000 reduction in EBITDA shown on the chart stems from lower forecasted differentials from Waha to Katy and lower price realizations year-over-year in our G&P, NGL, and refined products businesses. We have also not forecasted any gains on debt repurchases in 2026, bringing us to an adjusted EBITDA midpoint of $8,100,000,000 for 2026. Our expectations reflect an average WTI crude oil price range of $55 to $60 per barrel in 2026 and incorporate normal seasonal dynamics across the business which influence how earnings are distributed throughout the year. To help illustrate this, we have added another new slide to our earnings material on page eight that outlines the key factors driving results by quarter and directionally shows an earnings cadence that typically builds progressively over the course of the year. On average, we expect to make a little over $22,000,000 of EBITDA each day in 2026. With the first quarter only having 90 days compared with 92 days in the third and fourth quarter, coupled with the impacts of weather, we expect the first quarter to be our lowest EBITDA quarter each year. We expect earnings growth across our natural gas liquids projects to be completed in 2026 across our system, which Randy will review in a moment, as well as the Texas City export terminal and the Bighorn Processing Plant. Capital for synergy-related projects, ongoing well connections, and maintenance are also included. As we have discussed previously, we expect capital expenditures to continue to step down in the coming years as we complete current projects, and we do not expect to pay meaningful cash taxes until 2029, both of which continue to support our free cash flow and capital allocation flexibility going forward. I will turn it over to Randy for an operational and large capital projects update.