Great. Thank you, Jim. Turning to Page 12, as Jim mentioned earlier on the call, we are proud of the progress we made last year. In the fourth quarter, we delivered on our previously provided EPS expectations, driving sequential improvement of $0.02 from the third quarter to $0.12 in the fourth quarter. Adjusted sales were approximately $229.4 million, a decline of 3.3% relative to the third quarter. This was primarily due to the incremental impact of the UAW strike of approximately $5.5 million in the quarter as well as the continued softening of demand for Electric Vehicles relative to prior expectations. Fourth quarter adjusted operating income was $6.2 million or 2.7% of adjusted sales, a decline of approximately 40 basis points versus the third quarter. This was due in part to the incremental impact of the UAW strike of $2 million over the third quarter, as well as continued costs related to the distressed supplier we discussed during our last call of approximately $1.1 million. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $15.6 million or 6.8%. Turning to page 13, on our third quarter earnings call, we guided fourth quarter adjusted EPS to a range of $0.10 to $0.20 with an expected revenue midpoint of $238 million. Unfavorable FX movements reduced sales by $7 million will reduce production volumes resulted in a $0.02 headwind relative to our previously-provided guidance, primarily due to the slowing growth of Electric Vehicle platforms. Fourth quarter operating performance resulted in a $0.04 headwind during the quarter versus previous expectations. During the fourth quarter, we observed, higher we absorbed higher manufacturing costs than previously expected primarily related to elevated warranty and inventory costs on higher than normal inventory balances. This was partially offset by continued run rate material cost improvements as well as reduced operating expenses primarily driven by engineering reimbursements and the reduction of our annual incentive compensation programs. As we discussed previously, we incurred approximately $1.8 million of costs related to a specific distressed supplier which we expected to be relatively minimal in the fourth quarter. We expected these costs to moderate with improvement in the situation. Unfortunately, we continued to incur incremental costs relative to the third quarter to provide additional support to the supplier. Although, we are still incurring some costs related to the situation, the costs are moderating as we navigate the first half of this year. We will pursue routes to recover these incremental costs. However, our priority remains investing in end customer disruption. The after-tax net impact of foreign currency versus prior expectations resulted in approximately $0.03 of net benefit in the quarter. The below-the-line favorable impact of foreign currency more than offset the unfavorable FX impact to operating income of approximately $900,000 recognized during the quarter. We remain focused on operational execution and controlling the variables within our control to drive performance. We will continue to respond to externalities as necessary to insulate the company from macroeconomic headwinds and drive overall performance. Page 14 summarizes our key financial metrics specific to control devices Control Devices. Control Devices, fourth quarter sales declined by approximately $15 million versus the third quarter, due to the UAW strike as well as a slower rate of penetration for Electric Vehicles. Fourth quarter operating margin of 1.2% declined by 500 basis points compared to the third quarter, primarily due to reduced fixed cost leverage on decremental sales and incremental costs recognized in the fourth quarter related to the distressed supplier outlined previously. In total, we estimate that the UAW strike and distressed supplier costs impacted Control Devices operating margin by approximately $3.6 million or 440 basis points in the fourth quarter. Excluding the impact of these headwinds, adjusted operating margin was relatively in line with prior quarters despite significantly lower sales control devices. Control Devices full year sales of $345.3 million were approximately in line with 2022 generating operating income of $13.4 million or 3.9% of sales. For the full year, we estimate that the UAW strike and distressed supplier costs impacted Control Devices operating margin by approximately 120 basis points. In addition to relatively flat end market performance, we expect a continued ramp-up of electric vehicle platforms, however, at a lower pace than previously expected, which will impact some of our recently launched actuation applications. As a result, we expect Control Devices sales to slightly decline this year relative to last year. That said, we have identified several opportunities to reduce material costs through redesigns or supply chain strategies to help improve gross margin going forward and offset this slight decline in sales, despite the modest decline in sales that we expect for control devices in 2024 we are expecting a stable margin profile. As discussed on previous calls, we remain focused on dry training ASIC technology to drive new business awards as the market evolves we continue to focus on operational excellence and enterprise-wide cost reduction, including material cost reduction plans to drive margin improvement going forward. Page 15, summarize our key financial metrics. Specifically to electronics. Electronics fourth quarter sales increased by $4.4 million or 3.1% compared to the third quarter. Full year sales of $593.6 million increased by approximately 25% compared to the prior year. Sales growth was driven primarily by higher customer production volumes, the MirrorEye launch with Kenworth in North America, the smart two tachograph launch in Europe and the continued growth of our existing MirrorEye OEM program in Europe. We expect continued strong sales growth in 2024 driven by MirrorEye launches with Peterbilt and Volvo in Europe both midyear as Jim discussed earlier in the call. Similarly, we expect significant growth related to the two Smart as regulatory requirements force adoption both in OEM applications and in the retrofit market. Fourth quarter adjusted operating margin of 7.5% expanded by 130 basis points compared to the third quarter primarily due to lower engineering costs due to the timing of customer reimbursements. This was partially offset by elevated warranty and inventory related costs incurred on higher than normal inventory balances. Full year operating margin expanded by approximately 400 basis points, compared to the prior year primarily due to contribution on incremental revenue, stabilization in the supply chain and material cost improvements, including the impact of incremental pricing. This was partially offset by incremental engineering costs related to the launch of new programs. We are proud of the progress we made this year in electronics led by our strong sales growth and cost improvement actions. Looking forward, we expect continued margin expansion as we focus on improving our manufacturing performance and focus on quality driven processes and efficient execution of new program launches as well as the continued ramp-up of our existing programs. Electronics remains well positioned to take advantage of significant future growth and margin expansion, as a result of a strong product portfolio a substantial and growing backlog of awarded programs, continued improvement in material cost and cost structure organizational optimization. Page 16 summarizes our key financial metrics. Specific to Stoneridge Brazil, Stoneridge Brazil's full year sales totaled approximately $57.2 million, an increase of $4.9 million, or 9.5% relative to the prior year. Full year adjusted operating income increased by approximately 190 basis points relative to the prior year, primarily driven by lower material costs and fixed cost leverage on incremental sales, resulting in adjusted operating margin of 7%. We expect stable revenue and operating margin in 2024 as we continue to shift our portfolio in Brazil to more closely align with our global growth initiatives and further expand our local OEM programs to support our global customers. Brazil has become a critical engineering center as we continue to expand our global engineering capabilities and capacity. We will continue to utilize our global footprint to cost effectively support our global business. Turning to page 17, net debt to trailing 12-month EBITDA as calculated for compliance purposes remained relatively flat quarter to quarter resulting in a leverage ratio of approximately 3.1 times, with supply chains mostly normalized. We are focused on improving cash performance and reducing net debt through targeted actions to reduce net working capital, and more specifically, our inventory balance. Over the course of the last couple of years, we have procured materials when available during supply chain shortages and committed to future material purchases to ensure material availability forward. Our response to those supply chain challenges, along with planned inventory build to support significant growth and new program launches, has resulted in an inventory balance that is higher than our historical average. We are focused on improving our inventory turns this year, to more closely align, with our historical averages. Going forward, we see additional opportunities to streamline our operations, evolve our supply chain strategies and continue to design products to enable efficient material procurement and production, to drive inventory turns even higher. We are focused on reducing net working capital to improve cash performance, reduce net debt and related interest expense. Based on our 2024 guidance and net working capital initiatives, we expect a compliance leverage ratio of less than 2.75 times, at the end of the first quarter of this year, and between two and 2.5 times by the end of the year. We are focused on maximizing cash performance to drive value to shareholders. Turning to Slide 18, we are establishing guidance for our 2024 financial performance. We are guiding 2024 revenue to a midpoint of $1 billion, an increase of approximately 4% versus 2023. This revenue growth is expected to significantly outperform our weighted average OEM end markets, which are expected to decline by approximately 5%, resulting in nine percentage points of market outperformance. We expect strong contribution margins on our growth, and the ability to take advantage of our existing cost structure to drive operating leverage, as we grow. We are guiding gross margin to a midpoint of 22.4%, operating margin to a midpoint of 3% and EBITDA to a midpoint of $67 million or 6.7% of sales. Our midpoint guidance implies EBITDA margin expansion of 170 basis points and approximately$90 million, relative to 2023. Based thereon, and considering an expected tax rate of approximately 33%, we are guiding to a midpoint of $0.35 of EPS for the full year. Turning to Slide 19, we expect strong growth in 2024, driving midpoint revenue guidance to $1 billion. MirrorEye continues to be a major growth driver, as Jim discussed earlier in the call, we expect $100 million of MirrorEye revenue in 2024, an increase of $46 million versus the prior year or almost double the total sales. Due to the incremental launches on Peterbilt in North America and Volvo in Europe both midyear, we expect incremental MirrorEye revenue to accelerate in the second half of the year. Another specific growth driver in 2024, is the expected ramp-up of our Smart 2 tachograph programs, that launched in the third quarter of last year. This next generation Smart tachograph will be required to be on vehicles across weights and usage applications, over the next several years, with the current market primarily served by Stoneridge and only one other competitor. This will drive both OEM growth, as well as aftermarket opportunities, as existing vehicles are also subject to the regulations. As a result, we expect Smart 2 tachograph contribute $30 million of incremental revenue in 2024. That said, we expect the adoption of this next-generation device to ramp up in the second half of the year, as the adoption deadlines approach. Other factors contributing to our growth in 2024, include the continued growth in our off-highway vision systems with Orlaco branded products and OEM programs launching in Brazil, as we continue to expand our OEM product offerings in South America. Due to the second half weighting for MirrorEye and the Tachograph ramp-up, as well as improved production forecast in the second half of the year, we are expecting revenue to be more back half weighted than usual. Overall, we expect to first half second half revenue split of approximately 48% to 52%, with a slight ramp up between the first and second quarter, relatively larger growth between the second and third quarter, aligned with our key program launches and another gradual ramp-up into the fourth quarter. We continue to significantly -- outpace our underlying end markets, creating a runway for sustainable long-term growth. Page 20, summarizes our expectations for full year EBITDA, relative to 2023. In 2024, we are expecting EBITDA growth of approximately $19 million and EBITDA margin expansion of approximately 170 basis points. We are expecting contribution margins aligned, with our historical average of 25% to 30%, on approximately $38 million of revenue growth, resulting in over $10 million in EBITDA growth. We are expecting gross margin expansion, driven by material cost improvement and enterprise-wide initiatives, aimed at improving manufacturing performance including, the reduction of quality related costs. More specifically, we continue to focus on improving the price-cost relationship of our products through redesign, reengineering and other supply chain strategies aimed at reducing overall material costs. We are expecting a moderate increase in SG&A primarily, driven by annual inflationary labor increases and the normalization of our annual incentive cost programs, back to targeted levels in 2024, after they were reduced in 2023. We expect to continue to invest in the engineering resources, that will drive our growth and expect to offset these investments, with continued footprint optimization resulting in approximately flat D&D expense year-on-year. Aligned with our revenue cadence for the year, we expect EBITDA to be more back-half weighted. We expect first quarter EBITDA to slightly decline relative to the fourth quarter of 2023, primarily due to the annualization of our targeted incentive compensation programs and timing of engineering reimbursements compounded by slightly lower production in our commercial vehicle end markets. This will result in slightly below breakeven first quarter EPS. We expect gross margin improvement in the first quarter to continue into the second quarter. However, we are expecting some incremental engineering spend in the second quarter to ensure an efficient launch of our next two OEM MirrorEye programs as our next MirrorEye programs launch, smart tachograph adoption accelerates and production increases aligned with current third-party forecasts. We expect a significant improvement in EBITDA from the second to third quarter and continued improvement into the fourth quarter. We will continue to leverage our above market top line growth, targeted gross margin improvements and an efficient operating cost structure to drive earnings growth. Moving to slide 21. In summary, we expect continued strong revenue growth in 2024, continued focus on operational improvement and material cost reduction and continued optimization of our cost structure to drive earnings growth for the year. Longer term, Stoneridge remains well-positioned to significantly outpace our underlying markets with strong contribution margins and structural cost leverage driving a targeted five-year revenue midpoint of $1.45 billion and midpoint EBITDA margin of 13%, resulting in a midpoint target of $190 million of EBITDA by 2028. As always, driving shareholder value is at the forefront of all of Stoneridge’s strategic initiatives. With that, I will open up the call to questions.