Thanks, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. Fourth quarter, like all of 2024, was a strong one for Urban Edge. We executed on our business plan by improving deal economics, increasing occupancy, recycling capital into better assets and delivering projects at accretive returns. Let's get into the details of the quarter and the year, and then we can talk more broadly about what we see for 2025 and our path to continued growth. We signed 29 deals in the fourth quarter for over 400,000 square feet, 16 new leases at a same-space spread of 44% and 13 renewals at a 12% spread. That brought our total for the year up to 79 new leases totaling just under 0.5 million square feet and 86 renewals for almost 2 million square feet. The overall leasing volume for 2024 was on the high-end of our budget and the spreads of 26% and 9% on new leases and renewals respectively were strong. Those rent spreads, along with other critical deal points like, providing less tenant allowance capital and generating higher average annual rent increases than in years past, demonstrate our ability to identify and capitalize on the below-market rents embedded throughout our portfolio when those leases come back to us. As Jeff mentioned, in the fourth quarter, those results included new deals with a national grocer, soft good retailers, QSRs and fitness users as well as our first pickleball concept lease. Our portfolio same-property lease rate now stands at 96.6%, a 30 basis point increase over third quarter and an 80 basis point increase over year-end 2023. We ended 2024 with anchor leased occupancy of 98% and small shop occupancy of 90.9%. After gaining 320 basis points in shop occupancy in 2024, we have a clear path in 2025 to an additional 200 basis points to 250 basis points. This will bring shop occupancy between 93% and 94% for the year and overall occupancy between 97% and 98% by year-end. The demand continues to well outpace supply in our markets and foot traffic continues to increase, up 3% over last year at our grocery-anchored centers. In the Northeast, retail occupancy is at a 10-year high of 95% and new shopping center construction is at a near record low, only 0.2% of total supply. Tenant bankruptcies are a reality of our business and will remain so, but increasingly they are more opportunity than risk. In the locations where we have Party City and Big Lots, for example, we have replacement tenants identified at spreads up to 90%. If we're able to get all those spaces back, some replacement tenants will generate strong incremental returns while some because of the capital and time will be a modest return, but all of them will enhance portfolio quality and adjacent leasing as we cycle out older concepts and bring in better operators. We balance all these factors, economic return quality of operator, tenant mix, cross-shopping appeal when we look at how a tenant bankruptcy will impact our properties. More often than not, getting space back early is a net positive. On the development side, we ended 2024 with a strong in-place pipeline of $163 million at a 15% return, nearly all of it tied to executed leases. Our development plans at Sunrise Mall in Massapequa, New York gained some traction this quarter as well with the announcement from Macy's that they would be closing their store there leaving only one tenant remaining at the mall. Finally, while we did not acquire or dispose of any assets in the fourth quarter other than the previously announced Village at Waugh Chapel deal in October, we remain very active on both fronts. Cap rates for acquisitions have compressed with higher quality assets now trading below 6%, driven in part by institutional investors aggressively entering the retail space and solving for IRRs that are lower than retail historically commanded. On the disposition side, we are under contract to sell a freestanding building and parking field at Bergen Town Center in Paramus to a multifamily developer for a price of $25 million, representing an approximate 4% cap rate on the current in-place NOI. I will now turn it over to our Chief Financial Officer, Mark Langer.