Thanks, Louis, and good morning, everyone. I’d also like to thank our global team for their hard work and disciplined execution in the quarter. Now, let’s review our operating performance by segment. Starting with Automation & Motion Control, or AMC, net sales in the first quarter were up 40 basis points to the prior year period on an organic basis and nicely above our expectations. The performance primarily reflects strength in the Aerospace & Defense business and a return to growth in discrete automation, which was partially offset by weakness in general industrial and medical. The inflection to sales growth in discrete automation, which was up 12% to the prior year period is a noteworthy positive after a sustained period of pressure in that end market. We see growing positive momentum in this market based on our higher shippable backlog in the second half of the year and into 2026, which is also expected to be mix positive for the segment. AMC’s adjusted EBITDA margin in the quarter was 21.8%, which was almost two points above our expectations, on stronger mix aided by discrete automation inflecting to growth as well as benefits from higher volumes and good cost management by the team. Orders in AMC in the first quarter were down 3% versus prior year on a daily basis and excluding FX impacts. However, if we exclude data center, where we are seeing some project lumpiness, orders for AMC were up 2% in the quarter. Book-to-bill in the first quarter for AMC was 1.02. This project timing lumpiness is also reflected in April’s order performance when orders for AMC were down 6% on a daily basis due entirely to our Aero business. This is not something we are concerned about because Aero orders have been strong for some time, and we have a greater than 12-month backlog in this business. Given the longer cycle and project-driven characteristics of our AMC business, we think it is also important to look at orders on a rolling basis. As Louis mentioned, on a rolling 12-month average basis through first quarter, AMC’s orders are up nearly 7%, so we continue to feel good about the order momentum in AMC, where backlog has been building. In particular, the segment’s second half shippable backlog is up low teens versus this point last year, which is a key driver of the stronger second half sales performance we expect in AMC this year. Turning to Industrial Powertrain Solutions or IPS. Net sales in the first quarter were down 3.4% versus the prior year period on an organic basis or down 1.9% on a daily organic basis, which was in line with our expectations. The decline reflects significant, but expected weakness in the machinery/off-highway market as well as project timing in metals and mining, partially offset by strength in energy markets. By region, IPS sales in its core North America market were up low single digits in the quarter, which was more than offset by weakness in China, Europe and Rest of World. Adjusted EBITDA margin for IPS in the quarter was 26.9%, about 90 basis points above our expectations and up 110 basis points versus the prior year. The upside versus our guide was largely tied to stronger mix with the improvement versus prior year aided mainly by synergies. Orders in IPS on a daily basis and excluding FX impacts, were up nearly 9% in the first quarter. We believe this strong performance reflects further outgrowth, in particular, wins on projects in the attractive metals and mining and marine markets. It is helpful to recognize that order bookings in our IPS segment are increasingly waited to longer cycle orders especially with our strategic focus on selling industrial powertrain systems. The business is split roughly 50-50 between OE and aftermarket. We would say the aftermarket business is predominantly short cycle and the OE business is split roughly - evenly between short and longer cycle, implying that 25% to 30% of IPS overall is longer cycle. As the longer cycle portion of IPS continues to grow, it should give us more visibility into our revenue performance and improve our ability to manage through market cycles. Book-to-bill in the first quarter for IPS was 1.13. In April, orders on a daily organic basis were up 1%, which we find encouraging given the strong nearly 9% orders growth that IPS achieved in the first quarter. Turning to Power Efficiency Solutions or PES. Net sales in the first quarter were up 8% versus the prior year on an organic basis, which was above our expectations. The result largely reflects strong growth in Residential HVAC, which was up nearly 30% in the quarter. This is partially offset by modest declines in the general commercial market. Versus our expectations, Resi HVAC markets were notably stronger. Overall, we were very pleased to see this segment return to growth and are cautiously optimistic this positive momentum can continue. We would attribute the particular strength in Resi HVAC to a few factors: first, a strong furnace season. Second, destocking impacts after last year’s prebuy were smaller than anticipated, but may still become more significant in the second quarter. Finally, we likely saw some buying ahead of tariff-related price changes. In short, there is a lot of noise currently in the Resi HVAC data and channel. And so for now, we are remaining measured in our approach to forecasting this business. The adjusted EBITDA margin for the quarter for PES was 14.2%, which was above our expectation, aided by higher volumes, better mix and strong cost management. Orders in PES for the first quarter were up just over 1% on a daily basis and excluding FX impacts. This result is above our expectations given anticipated headwinds related to destocking in Resi HVAC. Book-to-bill in the quarter for PES was 1.02. Daily orders for PES in April were down almost 2%, which is consistent with our expectation that we would see some modest headwinds to orders related to Resi HVAC destocking and weakness in the non-U.S. commercial HVAC business. On the following slide, we highlight some additional financial updates for your reference. Notably, on the right side of this page, we ended the quarter with total debt of approximately $5.3 billion, and net debt now sits just below $5 billion. We repaid approximately $164 million of gross debt in the quarter. Of further note, we ended the quarter with variable rate debt of roughly $290 million, representing just over 5% of our total debt outstanding, which we expect to have substantially repaid by the end of the third quarter. Adjusted free cash flow in the quarter was $85.5 million, which was primarily deployed to debt reduction. We plan to continue deploying the majority of our free cash flow to debt reduction in 2025. Turning to the outlook. Today, we are reaffirming our 2025 guidance, including sales, organic growth, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted earnings per share and our prior adjusted EPS range of $9.60 to $10.40. All our assumptions are outlined in the table on the right-hand side of this slide. While we are pleased with our performance in the first quarter, given we are only one quarter into the year and considering the current macroeconomic uncertainty, we believe it is prudent to remain measured in our approach to guidance. As a result, we are not flowing the strong first quarter outperformance into our guidance. Regarding tariffs, we expect our mitigation actions, which I will discuss in more detail on the next slide, will neutralize the impact of tariffs on our 2025 adjusted EBITDA and earnings per share. I would note that to date, we have not seen clear signs of tariff-related demand deterioration in our business. Our teams have been close to our customers in recent months regarding this topic. And while they are hearing broad-based acknowledgment of heightened uncertainty, we have had little feedback regarding changes to planned spending. Of course, tariff dynamics have been volatile and playing out over a relatively short period of time. So it may simply be too early to be seeing clear signs that spending will be impacted. Regardless, this is something we are monitoring closely and intend to provide an update on the demand outlook if and when material new information becomes available. Finally, before I leave this slide, I want to share a few thoughts on the various tariff-related crosscurrents that could impact Regal Rexnord, dynamics that we have not factored into our guidance. On one hand, we see potential sales upside from tariff-related pricing, new share gain opportunities and more favorable currency rates. On the flip side, we could see weaker demand due to a softer macro environment and/or elasticity in response to our higher prices. We believe it is premature to say with any precision how these dynamics may play out. But at this time, we believe the positives likely outweigh the negatives. On this slide, we are updating our expectations regarding tariff impacts and how we are responding. In the first column on the left, we lay out the annual unmitigated cost impact from tariffs in place at the time of our March 19 tariff update. The estimated gross annual impact at that time totaled approximately $60 million, broken down between steel/aluminum, Mexico/Canada and China as detailed on the slide. There was no Rest of World impact at that time. At March 19, our mitigation actions were expected to neutralize tariff impacts on our adjusted earnings per share within the year and to result in a neutral impact to EBITDA margins by the end of this year. In the next column, we are updating these estimates based on tariffs in place as of yesterday, May 5, when we released our earnings. The gross annualized unmitigated impact is now $130 million, again, broken down on the slide by category and region. The main changes since our prior update are a larger impact from China and adding impacts from Rest of World. You can see further down that column that we still expect our mitigation actions to result in tariffs having a neutral P&L impact within this year and a neutral EBITDA margin impact by mid-2026. Notably, the majority of today’s update relates to higher China impacts given we have limited exposure on Rest of World. On the right-hand side of the slide, we lay out our principal mitigation actions, which we started to implement during the first quarter. These include supply chain realignments, production relocations, productivity measures and pricing actions. We have early positive momentum behind these actions, which bolsters our confidence we can fully mitigate tariff impacts on our P&L. We are prioritizing actions other than price in order to minimize tariff cost impacts for our customers. And given the flexibility of our global manufacturing footprint and our in-region, for-region manufacturing strategy, we believe these can have a meaningful impact. That said, we still expect that pricing will be an important contributor to our mitigation efforts, and we started to take tariff-related pricing actions in the first quarter. We also share a few other tariff-related considerations. One, approximately 95% of our imports to the U.S. from Mexico and Canada are USMCA compliant. Two, we are dual country sourced on a majority of our imports to the U.S. from China. Three, our flexible global manufacturing footprint is enabling production moves outside of China, many of which are currently underway. And finally, the Rest of World impact on Regal is relatively small, reinforcing our in-region, for-region strategy. The bottom line is that we are confident under tariffs currently in place, our mitigation actions should neutralize tariff impacts on our adjusted EBITDA and earnings per share in 2025 with margin neutrality occurring mid-2026. On this slide, we provide more specific expectations for our performance by segment on revenue and adjusted EBITDA margin for second quarter and for the full year. While our full year assumptions are largely unchanged, I will flag one update. We moved the PES sales guide from down low single digits to approximately flat, considering that segment’s strong start to the year, plus our view that some of that positive momentum will carry into the second quarter. We now expect all of our segments to see roughly flat sales in 2025 versus the prior year, which is consistent with our enterprise-level expectation for flat organic growth. As I wrap up my prepared comments, I’d like to emphasize three points. One, while recent trade policy turmoil is creating some uncertainty, we feel very good about our ability to achieve tariff-related cost and margin neutrality. Two, we believe the underlying momentum in our business is positive. We have now had four quarters in a row of positive orders. And compared to the same time last year, our backlog scheduled to ship in the second half of this year is up low double digits in AMC and up high single digits in IPS, which gives us confidence in our full year guide. And three, even if we do encounter some macro frictions ahead, we still have many levers to pull to create shareholder value, which include $90 million of remaining cost synergies, ample sales synergies, opportunities to materially shift our capital structure to equity as we generate cash and pay down our debt, a range of outgrowth initiatives and expected share wins due to tariff uncertainty. In summary, we are confident we will create value for our shareholders in 2025 and beyond. And with that, operator, we are now ready to take questions.