Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. As a reminder, my discussion today will reference the supplemental slides posted on our website. I will discuss total revenue growth, both as reported and in constant currency and segment growth in constant currency only. I will also provide information excluding license and support revenue or Ex-L&S and to allow investors to assess the progress we are making outside the portion of ECS, where revenue and profit recognition is tied to license renewal timing which can be uneven between quarters and years. As Mike discussed, our performance reflects consistent execution of our strategy and sustained improvement in brand awareness industry recognition and new business signings. We are gaining traction in the market for our solutions and see large growth opportunities in applications, security, data, device subscription services, endpoint management and experience management. We also continue to enhance our solutions to include emerging technology that supports our clients' future analytic operational, data and security needs and allows for continual operational improvement of our delivery. Our solution investment extends our clear path forward 2050 strategy, which continues to drive favorable trends in our Ex-L&S business. Looking at our results you can see on Slide 4. First quarter revenue was $432 million, down 11.4% year-over-year as reported and 8.5% in constant currency, primarily due to Ex-L&S renewal timing. Excluding license and support, first quarter revenue was $361 million, down 8.5% year-over-year and down 5.5% in constant currency, due to lower discretionary volumes in the DWS and CA&I segments. This directionally aligned to the color we provided at year end, as the sequential ramp is expected to begin in the second quarter of this year. Additionally, a one-time benefit in the prior year first quarter related to a favorable settlement of a previously exited contract negatively affected the Ex-L&S growth rate by 160 basis points on a reported basis. I will now discuss our segment revenue which you can find on Slide 4 in constant currency terms. As a reminder in January 2025, the company changed its organizational structure to streamline our operations and centralize all application capabilities within CAI and shifted our business process solutions into ECS. Our Form 8-K filed on March 14th contains two years of reclassified quarterly segment results. Revenue in our digital workplace solutions segment declined 7.5% year-over-year to $119 million in the first quarter. These declines were primarily driven by field service volumes, which declined throughout last year but stabilized in the first quarter and picked up in March. The quarter was also impacted by lower levels of discretionary project work and declines in third-party volume which will pick up as our DSS signings ramp starting in the second half of this year. We expect further increases in enterprise storage volumes and easing year-over-year growth comparisons to support improving sequential and year-over-year growth and profitability in each of the remaining quarters this year. Cloud applications and infrastructure solutions revenue declined 3.3% year-over-year to $177 million in the first quarter. The decline in the first quarter was driven by lower volumes with existing clients due to the timing of project work and some expected scope reductions in traditional infrastructure primarily with clients in the public sector. Among the state and local governments and higher education organizations that we work with we are seeing some concern related to federal funding levels, which is translating into delayed decision making. We believe these impacts will be temporary and that U.S. public sector clients may be incentivized to move more quickly to modernize reduce costs and achieve more sustainable IT operations. Enterprise computing Solutions revenue was down 11.2% year-over-year to $119 million in the first quarter due to Ex-L&S renewal timing as expected. Within the segment Ex-L&S revenue was $71 million in the first quarter. Specialized services and next generation compute solutions within ECS grew 9.2% in the first quarter with growth driven by increased volumes in business process solutions in Asia Pacific. First quarter total contract value was $434 million, including $337 million from new business signings trailing 12 months book to bill was 1.0 times for the total company relatively flat sequentially. Book to bill in our Ex-L&S solutions was also 1.0 times up from 0.9 times last quarter. We exited the year with backlog of $2.9 billion, up 2% sequentially and 4% year-over-year. In the first quarter we had double digit year-over-year backlog growth in DWS driven primarily by DSS signings the largest of which will roll out region by region over a two year period. As we mentioned last quarter we expect 2025 to be a higher renewal TCV year benefiting backlog and book-to-bill throughout the year though the bulk of those renewals are expected in the back half of the year. Moving to slide 6, first quarter gross profit was $108 million, a 24.9% gross margin compared to 27.9% in the prior year period reflecting low Ex-L&S revenue due to the scheduled timing of client contract renewals. First quarter Ex-L&S and gross margin was 17.8% down 20 basis points year-over-year. Adjusting for the one-time benefit in the prior year period Ex-L&S gross margin improved by 120 basis points reflecting our ongoing delivery and labor optimization and some accretion from new business signed in 2024 which was partially offset by investments in hiring and training ahead of revenue generation. I will now touch briefly on segment gross profit. DWS segment gross margin was 14.2% in the first quarter down 20 basis points year-over-year. We made investments in advance of new business in DWS where we are ramping up labor and training related to enterprise storage field services and to support our capabilities, such as liquid cooling for AI factories. Looking ahead, the DSS wins we had in the first quarter include a sizable portion of hardware revenue, which is accretive to profit dollars and a tailwind to top line growth though has a lower margin profile and may result in a more gradual slope to the improvement in DWS segment gross margin. CA&I segment growth margin with 19.5% in the first quarter, up 10 basis points year-over-year a solid result given the softness in first quarter public sector discretionary revenue. ECS segment growth margin was 47.7% in the first quarter down 690 basis points year-over-year due to timing of renewals in our highly profitable Ex-L&S solutions and a higher hardware component partially offset by improvement in our SSNC solutions. Moving to Slide 7. First quarter non-GAAP operating profit margin was 2.8% compared to 7.1% in the prior period. This was in line with the low single digit color provided last quarter, which was expected due to the timing of L&S renewals in the quarter. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $40 million, a margin of 9.3%. Our operating expenses declined approximately $16 million year-over-year and we continue to diligently execute against our plan to bring down SG&A expenses. SG&A was down nearly 14% from a year ago. First quarter net income was negative $30 million translating to diluted loss of $0.42 per share. Adjusted net loss was $3 million for the quarter, a diluted loss per share of $0.05. Turning to Slide 8, first quarter capital expenditures totaled approximately $20 million relatively flat on a year-to-year basis. As a reminder, a significant portion of capital expenditure relates to relatively steady levels of solution development for our L&S platforms while we maintain a capital light strategy in our Ex-L&S solutions. Pre-pension free cash flow in the quarter, which is free cash flow prior to pension and post-retirement contributions was $23 million, up $11 million year-over-year, while free cash flow was $13 million more than doubling in the quarter compared to $4 million, a year earlier. Enhanced cash flow derived from improved working capital dynamics partially offset by slightly higher levels of post-retirement funding and cost reduction payments. Moving to Slide 9, cash balances increased to $393 million as of March 31st compared to $377 million at year end, including all defined benefit pension plans our net leverage ratio is 3.2 times relatively stable on a year-over-year basis. Our liquidity position is strong with significant cash balances and our $125 million ABL facility, which has an accordion of up to $155 million remains undrawn. I will now provide an update on our global pension plans. Each year end, we provide more detailed estimated projections for expected global cash pension contributions and GAAP deficit relative to our quarterly updates. These projections change based on factors such as financial market conditions, funding regulations and actuarial assumptions. Based on asset returns and market conditions, we estimate that as of March 31 2025 both our GAAP deficit and expected cash contributions for the five-year period beginning in 2025 through 2029, are essentially unchanged from year end 2024. Pension contributions begin in our US plans in the second quarter and we expect contributions to all global pension plans to total approximately $27 million in each of the remaining three quarters of the year. Turning to Slide 10, I will now discuss our financial guidance for the full year. We are reiterating our total company revenue growth guidance range of positive 0.5% to positive 2.5% in constant currency, which based on foreign exchange rates as of the end of the first quarter, equates to reported revenue growth of negative 1.1% to positive 0.9%. As Mike mentioned, while macroeconomic factors are fluctuating, our base is resilient with relatively low direct exposure to tariffs and trade barriers we know of today. However, we do expect delayed client decision making that occurred in the first quarter to have some marginal impact on the trajectory of Ex-L&S revenue, which may bring constant currency Ex-L&S revenue growth below the midpoint of the one to 5% range, we assumed in our original guidance. For license and support, we are now assuming revenue of approximately $410 million, which offsets the first quarter Ex-L&S delays that I just mentioned allowing us to maintain the total company revenue growth guidance. Roughly half of the $20 million increase in our Ex-L&S revenue assumption, is related to longer terms expected on certain fourth quarter renewals with the remainder from incremental hardware at a more modest gross margin. This change will have minimal impact on future years and given the overall favorable consumption trends across our installed base, we continue to expect approximately $400 million of L&S revenue in 2026. As a reminder, the timing and exact amount of L&S revenue can be difficult to forecast with precision given it is dependent on renewal timing and size, which can change based on client budgeting decisions, consumption levels and duration preferences among other factors. For full year non-GAAP operating profit margin, we continue to expect a range of 6.5% to 8.5% and see a path to coming above the midpoint, given the improved outlook in our Ex-L&S solutions and improvement in delivery and operational efficiency. The upside of Ex-L&S is expected in the fourth quarter, generating incremental cash in 2026 keeping us on track to achieve our cash flow objectives. For 2025, we continue to expect approximately $100 million of pre-pension free cash flow, and a slightly positive free cash flow after funding our pension contributions, allowing us to preserve our strong cash balances. Our pre-pension free cash flow outlook reflects improvement in cash conversion as environmental legal restructuring and other payments are expected to be a net positive $10 million inclusive of a one-time collection of the remaining $25 million owed to us as part of the favourable legal settlement we negotiated in the fourth quarter of 2024. Our cash outlook assumes capital expenditures of approximately $95 million cash taxes of approximately $70 million and net interest payments of about $15 million. Cash interest does not include any assumption of refinancing. However, as mentioned earlier we are actively monitoring market conditions to opportunistically expand our debt structure, and further advance our pension mitigation strategy. Looking specifically at the second quarter, we expect approximately $375 million of Ex-L&S revenue representing sequential growth in the mid-single digits. Based on renewal timing second quarter Ex-L&S revenue is expected to be similar to the first quarter with approximately 35% of Ex-L&S revenue in the first half and approximately 65% in the back half. Given the cadence of L&S renewal timing and the impact of foreign exchange this translates to a total company reported revenue decline of approximately seven to 8% and a slightly positive non-GAAP operating margin. As Ex-L&S and revenue improves sequentially over the next three quarters and L&S revenue and profit takes a meaningful step up in the third and fourth quarter, we expect growth and profitability to significantly increase in the back half of the year bringing us to our full year ranges. Operator, you may now open the line for questions.