Christopher M. Paulsen
Thanks, Chris. In Q4, we increased pricing to an all-time high, averaging $21.69 per horsepower, a 1% increase in sequential quarters and a 4% increase compared to the year-ago period. Average active horsepower increased approximately one relative to Q3 to 3,579,000. Our fourth quarter adjusted gross margins came in at 66.8%, right on historical trend. Regarding the consolidated financial results, our fourth quarter 2025 net income was $27,800,000, operating income was $76,600,000, net cash provided by operating activities was $139,500,000, and cash interest expense, net, was $43,400,000. Our leverage ratio at the end of the fourth quarter was 4.0x. Turning to operational results. Our total fleet at the end of the quarter was approximately 3,900,000 horsepower, adding approximately 21,000 horsepower as compared to the prior quarter. Our average utilization for the fourth quarter was 94.5%, a slight increase compared to the prior quarter. Fourth quarter 2025 expansion capital expenditures were $40,000,000 and our maintenance capital expenditures were $7,800,000. Expansion capital spending in Q4 primarily consisted of new units. Turning to 2025 full-year results, we ended the year with adjusted EBITDA of $613,800,000. We also ended the year with distributable cash flow of $385,700,000, above the recently increased guidance, in part due to the final preferred unit conversion in December. Maintenance capital ended at $39,400,000, and expansion was $117,600,000, both towards the lower end of previously provided guidance. Looking ahead and with the contribution full year of JW, we are forecasting adjusted EBITDA of $770,000,000 to $800,000,000 and distributable cash flow of $480,000,000 to $510,000,000. Maintenance capital range is forecasted to be $60,000,000 to $70,000,000, allowing for consistent preventative maintenance intervals across our combined fleet. Expansion capital range is $230,000,000 to $250,000,000, which includes just over 100,000 new horsepower, or over 2% of our active fleet being added, and panel upgrades for improved telemetry practices. The expansion capital range also includes approximately $40,000,000 of other capital, including vehicles, tools, investments in technology, and other items. This expanded growth capital budget relative to prior years will enable us to better respond to the needs of our broader customer base and enable us to get new horsepower in both the Permian and the Northeast. The net result of our budget should enable us to improve upon our debt metrics, with our near-term targets at 3.75x debt to EBITDA, a quarter-turn improvement over the next twelve. We remain committed to managing debt levels and will remain open to transactions that further delever the balance sheet and are accretive to unitholders. We also continue to evaluate our capital structure and its fixed versus floating proportion as it relates to DCF and business certainty. Today, at current Fed rates, our borrowing costs are improved by approximately 50 basis points. By utilizing our ABL relative to our most recent notes refinance. We also have approximately a half a billion capacity, not including the $300,000,000 of additional accordion. Overall, I am very pleased with the operational momentum we carry into 2026 with the legacy USA Compression Partners, LP business and the JW Power assets. In the near term, the addition of JW assets will reduce our aggregate gross margins for the contract compression business. Our clear goal is to more closely align those margins with our own over the next two years, contributing to the synergies Christopher Wauson spoke of earlier. And with that, I will turn the call back to Clint for concluding remarks.