Thank you, Tom. The topics I will cover today include first, our fourth quarter and full year 2025 results, including recent transactions, Second, the 2026 macro outlook that drives our full year guidance and third, the building blocks of our 2026 guidance. To begin, on Slide seven, with our fourth quarter and full year FFO as adjusted per share, of $0.64 and $2.54 respectively, achieved the midpoints of our previously provided guidance ranges. Additionally, our same store expense and NOI growth results beat expectations while same store revenue growth met guidance. Our operation team's impressive navigation of a choppy fourth quarter in the apartment market reflected their preparation, agility, and execution. This positions us well for 2026 as Mike will explain shortly. During the fourth quarter, we completed the following transaction and capital markets activity. We completed the acquisition of The Enclave at Potomac Club a 406 apartment home community in Northern Virginia. For $147 million. We identified this community based on insights from our predictive analytics platform our assessment of future CapEx needs, our operations team's on the ground perspective, including the efficiencies that come with owning the property directly across the street. Early operational results indicate outperformance relative to the market, as we expected. Also, we contributed four apartment communities to expand our joint venture with LaSalle by approximately $230 million. Which increased the size of the venture to roughly $850 million. And with more than $200 million in proceeds from that joint venture expansion, we repaid $128 million of consolidated secured property debt at maturity and repurchased approximately $93 million of common stock at a weighted average share price of $35.56. Reflecting a sizable discount to NAV. Turning to Slide eight. And our macro outlook, we utilize a top down and bottom up approach to set our 2026 forecasts. Our internal forecasting models are informed by our proprietary perspective on our portfolio as well as third party forecast for economic factors that drive rent growth. Among the positive factors are inflationary growth for GDP and wages as well as continued declines in homeownership in part due to challenging affordability. Importantly, after a couple of years of outsized new apartment supply, this factor is now working in our favor. On the other hand, we anticipate a more muted job growth environment relative to recent years. And we are mindful of regulatory risk not just at the market level, but at the federal level given continued uncertainty over tariffs, immigration, and more. This has affected consumer confidence, which recently hit its lowest level in a decade. Building on this, we turn to Slide nine, which dives a bit deeper key tailwinds for our business. First, at the top left, Our residents' financial health remains strong, with the average rent to income ratio below the long term average. This suggests that our residents can comfortably accept rent increases reflective of the value and exceptional living experience at a UDR apartment community. Second, at the top right, the relative affordability of apartments remains decidedly in our favor in near all time high levels of attractiveness versus homeownership due to sustained elevated home prices and mortgage rates. Then at the bottom left, we show that the largest US aged cohort remains in its prime renter years, This is supportive of demand for our apartments. And fourth, at the bottom right, supply completions have meaningfully slowed across UDR's markets to a level below the long term average, and the outlook for 2027 is even more promising. With completion 60% below that of 2025. Combining these factors, we arrive at our 2026 guidance which is summarized on Slide 10. Primary expectations include full year FFOA per share guidance of $2.47 to $2.57, and same store revenue and growth expectations that translate to point 125% year over year NOI growth at the midpoint. Our full year 2026 FFOA per share guidance at the $2.52 midpoint represents a 2p or less than 1% year over year decline from the $2.54 achieved in 2025. As a reminder, 2025 featured 2 pennies from items we do not expect to repeat in 2026. Executive severance and the collection of previously unaccrued interest on a prior debt and preferred equity investment. From there, key differences in 2026 versus 2025 FFOA per share include a 1p per share increase from accretive share repurchase executed in 2025 a 1p increase from lower G and A, which is expected to decline by approximately 5% year over year as we emphasize cost control throughout the organization. This is offset by two items, a 1p decrease related to dispositions as we expect to be net sellers in 2026, a 1p decline from debt and preferred equity activities due to a lower average balance as we expect to reduce the size of the book as investments mature and are repaid. Moving on to Slide 11. Our heat map reflects our priorities as it relates to capital. Currently, the uses of capital that we believe offer the best risk adjusted returns include investment in our operating platform, share repurchases, and NOI enhancing CapEx. Conversely, JV capital and dispositions screen as relatively attractive sources of capital. At the same time, debt is significantly more attractive than equity. As contemplated in our full year guidance, we plan to be a net seller of assets in 2026. We are actively marketing for sale numerous apartment communities and we're generally pleased with the market's reaction. We look forward to sharing details on closings in the coming months. Lastly, on Slide 12, we provide our debt maturity schedule and liquidity. 12% of our total consolidated debt matures through 2027. Thereby reducing future refinancing risk. Combined with nearly $1 billion of liquidity, at twenty twenty five's year end, minimal committed capital, and strong free cash flow, our balance sheet is in a strong position. In all, 2025 was a highly productive year for UDR. We continue to execute on our strategic priorities, with an emphasis on data driven decisions that drive long term cash flow per share accretion. And with that, I will turn the call over to Mike.