Thank you, Omar. In the deck, you'll see a summary of some of our key performance indicators. We'll also be filing our 10-Q, which provides further information on Ranpak's operating results. Machine placement increased 0.9% year-over-year to approximately 140,800 machines globally. Cushioning systems declined 0.9%, while void-fill installed systems increased 1.3% and wrapping systems increased 1.8% year-over-year. Growth in the machine field population had been lower this year due to a combination of lower activity levels generally, particularly related to industrial and manufacturing sectors in Europe as well as our efforts to optimize our fleet. To maximize capital efficiency, we are focused on getting underutilized converters back and redeploying them to more productive areas. Overall, net revenue for the company in the first quarter was up 4.4% year-over-year on a constant currency basis, driven by increased volumes and contribution from automation, offset by slightly lower price. In North America, net revenue increased 2.6% year-over-year, with void-fill and automation up versus the prior year, offset by decreases in cushioning and wrapping. Volumes were lower versus prior year driven by a softer March, but we expect those to pick up in the region as the year progresses driven by our strategic account activity. In Europe and APAC, net revenue on a constant currency basis was up 5.4% year-over-year, driven by void-fill, wrapping and automation, offset by lower cushioning revenue as the industrial sector in Europe remains pressured. We are pleased to see the general continued recovery in this reporting unit as volumes increased 10% year-over-year and businesses begin to recover. We believe a part of the recovery we are seeing is due to the increased confidence stemming from the continued favorable natural gas pricing in Europe with Dutch Nat gas hovering around EUR 30 per megawatt. There has been some volatility recently due to rising geopolitical tensions, but we believe the amount of expected LNG capacity coming online and becoming available to Europe beginning in 2025 should help to keep a lid on pricing. Our gross profit increased 16.7% on a constant currency basis, implying a margin of 38% compared to 34% in the prior year. This is in line with our expectations as we expected gross margin to be roughly in line with Q4 throughout the year. As Omar mentioned, we are monitoring the commodity environment closely and are extremely focused on maintaining the gross margin profile we sought to regain after 2022. Adjusted EBITDA increased 33.8% year-over-year to $20.2 million, implying a 22.8% margin driven by a higher gross profit flow-through and controlled G&A spend. We are pleased with the continued overall improvement in the financial profile and are optimistic as more volumes flow through the complex and automation grows, we will continue to work our way back towards an attractive high-margin and cash-generative profile. Capital expenditures for the quarter were $9.8 million, driven by converter placement and investments related to our Malaysia production facility. We are keeping tight controls on capital expenditures this year as we are moving beyond our infrastructure investment cycle that brought us a world-class technology platform and fully invested and funded physical infrastructure assets across the globe. Moving briefly to the balance sheet and liquidity. We completed Q1 with a strong liquidity position, including a cash balance of $55 million to end the quarter, and no drawings on our revolving credit facility. We continue to make steady progress on our goal of deleveraging and reached 4.4 turns at the end of the quarter, down from 4.6x at 2023 year-end and 5.7x as of Q2 2023. We expect to build cash in the back half of the year as we enter the traditionally stronger holiday season and volumes pick up. The Malaysia production facility go live this summer marks the end of our multiyear infrastructure investment initiative and enables us to focus on getting a return on our investments as we scale our PPS and automation businesses. Our capital expenditure plans in 2024 are much more modest compared to recent prior years at less than $35 million, which we expect will enable us to generate cash in 2024 and help us deleverage further. Following quarter end, in April we settled the litigation matter and sold 2 patents, which resulted in total cash proceeds of EUR 20 million, bolstering our cash position and implying a pro forma leverage ratio of 4.1x on a constant currency basis, including the additional cash proceeds. Based on our adjusted EBITDA guide and expected cash generation, we expect leverage to be below 4 turns on a constant currency basis by year-end, with an ultimate goal to getting to 3 turns or below. We believe our recent commercial and financial progress along with a focus on deleveraging and cash generation positions us well to address our term loan maturities well before their maturities in June of 2026. Ranpak has a long history in the credit markets from years of private equity ownership, and I think would be well received by credit investors. For those of you who have spent time with us over the past few years, you know our goal is to have the cap structure not be a topic of conversation. This means a simple structure and a conservative leverage profile that addresses needs well in advance. With that, I'll turn it back to Omar before we move on to questions.