Thank you, Amol. The momentum in our core business remains strong. This trend provides the foundation for the next phase of growth as we combine with BD's Biosciences and Diagnostic Solutions business. Consistent with our strategy, the transaction accelerates our entry into multiple high-growth adjacencies. It also extends the reach of our proven execution model into other attractive high-volume segments. The combined company anchored by leading brands generating 80% of the revenue and a 70% annual recurring base create a powerful engine for consistent growth and will drive resilience across future CapEx cycles. Paired with highly attained cost and revenue synergies, this positions the company for an impressive financial trajectory with 7% top line and mid- teens adjusted EPS annualized CAGR growth on a combined company basis. I will now share some facts that address several key questions we have been getting from the investor community. Covering, first, our growth assumptions for BD Biosciences and Diagnostic Solutions on a stand-alone basis; second, our assumptions behind the cost and revenue synergies; third, the fit and quality of the microbiology business and the value creation upside opportunity that it holds; and fourth, integration leadership. Beginning with our growth assumptions for the BD Bioscience and diagnostic solutions on a stand- alone basis. From fiscal year 2019 to 2024, BD's Biosciences and Diagnostics businesses grew at a combined 5% CAGR driven by approximately 5.5% growth in Biosciences and 4.5% in diagnostics. The Biosciences figure includes the recent slowdown in drug discovery which has reduced CAGR growth by 150 basis points over this time frame. Adjusting for this, the underlying growth potential of the BD business is between 5.5% and 6% backed by long-term historical trends. In recent quarters, the business has experienced 3 temporary growth headwinds: one, softness in pharma drug discovery and U.S. academic and government funding; two, a short-term supply disruption affecting the BACTEC microbiology platform; and three, a U.S. export ban on flow cytometry products to China. We believe that the BACTEC supply constraints have been alleviated with utilization ramping back up across sites. At the same time, U.S. export licenses have been reinstated across high parameter flow cytometry access to China, resolving this issue. For pharma research and academic and government, we have taken a conservative approach in our growth rate assumptions to reflect ongoing industry headwinds. Our model prudently assumes a 40% decline in U.S. ANG funding through 2027 and flat revenue growth in pharma drug discovery in both 2026 and 2027 after the baseline is reset this year in 2025. Importantly, BD's Bioscience and diagnostic solutions exposure to U.S., ANG and pharma drug discovery is limited at a low-teens percentage of revenue. Putting these facts together, we estimate that the underlying BD Biosciences and Diagnostic Solutions business will gradually return to growth through the rest of calendar year 2025. We expect a slight decline in the quarter ending June 30 with further sequential growth rate improvement and a return to positive growth in the second half of the calendar year, all of which is reflected in our model. We then expect it to reach 4.5% growth in 2026, 5% growth in 2027 before then progressing back to its historical growth rate of mid- single digit plus in 2028 and beyond. When combined with a risk-adjusted $290 million in revenue synergies we've laid out, the expected total growth profile of BD Biosciences and Diagnostic Solutions is 7% on a CAGR basis. These synergies are evenly phased over the 5 years as commercial execution will kick into gear quickly while cross-selling and high-growth adjacencies will progressively phase in over time. We also see further upside to this growth as our model does not include growth contributions from much anticipated new product launches, which are expected to positively impact growth in BD's underlying business in 2026. This includes launches across the flow cytometry portfolio, the next-generation BACTEC launch in microbiology and other launches across the portfolio, all expected in 2026. I recently visited BD San Jose site to see the new FACSDiscover S8 Flow Cytometer in action. It impressively combines spectral and real-time imaging technologies to analyze over 50 cell characteristics with exceptional resolution and sensitivity. Many customers had delayed flow purchases in anticipation of this significant innovation with availability now in market, orders are running well ahead of target, just 2 months post launch. Now on to cost synergies and revenue synergies from this transaction. We expect to deliver $345 million in adjusted EBITDA synergies by year 5, driven by $200 million in cost by year 3 and $290 million in revenue synergies by year 5. The structure and execution plan behind these numbers gives us confidence in how actionable and achievable they are. On the cost side, the $200 million we outlined represents just under 5% of the combined company's cost base. In my prior role, integrating EMD Millipore and Sigma-Aldrich, we delivered synergies equal to approximately 8% of the total cost base. If we simply match that outcome here, it would fully backstop our entire $345 million adjusted EBITDA synergy target with cost alone. And remember, more recently in 2023, Waters executed a 5% head count reduction in one quarter when demand softened, reducing spans and layers and aligning our cost base to match the changing realities of the market without compromising performance and growth. That same discipline underpins our synergy plans. The $200 million in model cost synergies will come from 3 main areas: split across manufacturing and supply chain, commercial infrastructure and indirect procurement savings. In manufacturing and supply chain, we expect to generate approximately $80 million in savings with $40 million driven by site rationalization. A further $30 million comes from direct procurement savings, which amounts to just 2.5% of our direct material spend compared to a market benchmark of 5%. The remaining $10 million comes from freight lane optimization, which does not include upside potential from additional sourcing leverage. Commercial infrastructure service and technology streamlining are expected to contribute $75 million. Nearly half of these savings come from consolidating central functions inside sales and sales operations and do not impact quota-carrying reps or field service engineers. The other half reflects duplicative digital infrastructure and central service oversight as there is no need for multiple CRM systems, e-commerce stacks or service oversight organizations. The final $45 million comes from indirect procurement savings and efficiencies gained by leveraging our global capability center in India. We've taken a deliberately conservative approach, assuming indirect procurement contributes just $20 million or less than 2% of the combined direct spend -- indirect spend. The remainder comes from in-sourcing outsourced services to our global capability center where we already deliver equivalent output at a fraction of the cost. Beyond that, we see meaningful potential upside through rebalancing roles currently concentrated in high-cost geographies across the globe into more cost-efficient hubs and regional low-cost centers offering additional flexibility and long-term scalability to the cost base. On the revenue side, net of risk adjustment, we have mapped out a $290 million opportunity over 5 years that spans 3 clearly defined and execution-ready areas. This includes $150 million from commercial excellence, $115 million from high-growth adjacencies and $60 million from cross-selling. Commercial excellence is built on the same model that transformed Waters over the past 5 years. The BD business we are acquiring closely resembles where Waters stood in 2020. 30% of the installed base is due for replacement. 70% of revenue comes from reagents yet only a limited percentage flows through e-commerce and only 40% of the installed base is covered under a service plan. These are all levers we pulled at Waters with dramatic impact. By applying the same playbook to BD, we believe that $115 million is fully within reach. For example, increasing e-commerce attachment by 20% on BD's $1.8 billion reagents business, like we have achieved with Waters, unlocks an estimated $75 million in additional revenue alone. This math is based on what we have seen firsthand at Waters, where an incremental dollar is generated for every $5 shifted to digital. The next $115 million comes from 3 high-growth adjacencies, bioanalytical characterization, bio separations and mass spec in diagnostics, each contributing $35 million to $40 million. In bioanalytical characterization, flow cytometry and PCR are playing a growing role in large molecule QA/QC testing, bringing these technologies on to Empower will immediately enhance their capabilities and utility in regulated labs like how we integrated Wyatt earlier this year. For prudence, our $40 million revenue synergy estimate only reflects adoption in process development labs and does not include the larger QA/QC opportunity. Meanwhile, we know firsthand that a leading cell therapy manufacturer is actively looking to deploy flow cytometry in QA/QC for production, but has been held back by the lack of compliance, enabling informatics like Empower. In Bioseparations, traditional chemistry is reaching its limits for large molecule applications, where biological specificity is needed and requires antibodies. In response, we recently launched our BioResolve Protein A Affinity Columns. BD's deep antibody library will accelerate our product road map, unlocking multiple projects with joint innovation that we could not advance alone and creating an estimated $35 million in new opportunities. In diagnostics, upstream proteomics is identifying new biomarkers for early disease detection and residual disease monitoring as the field advances mass spec is becoming an essential tool for multiplex diagnostics. This trend is validated by a leading diagnostics company integrating mass spec into its high-throughput platform. Through BD, we gained immediate access to a global network of specialty diagnostic labs, supported by a service infrastructure offering 24-hour premium plans. This channel and service capability alone supports a $40 million revenue opportunity for us. Beyond this, BD's strength in regulatory, assay development and automation provide a platform to scale and expand our mass spec diagnostics menu. None of this upside is reflected in our base case assumptions. Finally, cross-selling is another significant revenue opportunity. BD's strong presence in Pharma Clinical Labs gives Waters access to customers we have historically struggled to reach. This is especially relevant in DMPK, where our TQ Absolute mass spec platform outperforms competitors, but has lacked penetration due to limited channel access. We estimate this opportunity at $60 million in Pharma DMPK alone and have not counted cross-selling opportunities in other lab settings. Further, our cross-selling assumptions do not include any contribution from mass spec for identification in microbiology labs or pharmas sterility testing in QA/QC applications, which are 2 areas I will cover in a moment. These revenue synergies, combined with the return of BD business to more normalized growth gives us a strong level of conviction in delivering on the financial plan presented at the announcement of the transaction with a 7% revenue CAGR and a mid-teens adjusted EPS growth CAGR between 2025 and 2030. Now I will cover the fit and quality of the microbiology business and the value creation upside opportunity that it holds. First, the quality of the assets we are bringing from BD into Waters are exceptional, especially in flow cytometry and microbiology. BD is a pioneer in flow cytometry and has consistently driven innovation and enabled critical advances across oncology, rare disease and immune health. It has a well-adopted presence in midstream pharma settings such as clinical labs and is increasingly moving downstream into manufacturing. Considering our premier position in downstream, the logic for this part of the business is very apparent. What is less apparent at first glance, though is the incredible strategic fit of the microbiology business, which is equally as compelling and holds significant value creation opportunity. BD is a leader in microbiology with a legacy of first in infectious disease diagnostics and is an innovative provider of total workflow solutions for clinical labs. Approximately 2/3 of BD's $1.8 billion diagnostic solutions business comes from microbiology. It benefits from consistent growth trends tied to infectious disease testing, anti-microbial resistance monitoring and increasing demand for lab automation. With its large installed base and strong brand recognition, we see a clear opportunity to enhance the performance of the microbiology business by uplifting its commercial execution and operational performance. This is particularly relevant because its revenue growth rate has trailed the competition by 180 basis points on a CAGR basis between 2019 and 2024, according to publicly available information. We faced a similar situation at Waters 5 years ago through focused and disciplined execution, we have since delivered outperformance versus the industry. Now based on our extensive diligence, we are confident we can repeat the success here. And the timing of this opportunity is particularly relevant with the launch of the next-generation BACTEC System next year in 2026. Together with our execution, this will offer an added innovation catalyst for system replacements and microbiology labs. At the same time, the microbiology business has a highly actionable 700 basis points gross margin expansion opportunity. This presents clear potential to add further value creation by applying Waters operational rigor and is not included in our underwriting model. Additionally, we see 2 potential growth vectors that are uniquely suited to Waters and microbiology that are not included in our revenue synergy assumptions. First is mass spec for microbial identification, which is an attractive $500 million TAM, growing high single digits that Waters does not serve today. By combining Waters strength in mass spec with BD's significant installed base and sales channel across over 10,000 clinical labs, we are well positioned to attach our mass specs to BD systems and enter this space. This is similar to how we have successfully attached our LCs to wires multi-angle light scattering detectors. Second, microbiology is a critical QA/QC in pharmaceutical manufacturing for sterility testing, yet neither BD nor Waters currently serves this segment. BD has the right product portfolio but has lacked channel access or expertise in manufacturing environments. Waters brings long-standing relationships and credibility in these regulated settings. Together, we can unlock this untapped $300 million market, growing at a high single-digit rate and establish a strong presence in this attractive QA/QC segment. Finally, I will discuss integration. Over the last 5 years, we have assembled a leadership team with deep experience in transformation and large integrations. I am pleased to announce that Chris Ross, currently Senior Vice President of Global Operations at Waters, will lead the integration office of our combined -- of our combination with BD's Bioscience and Diagnostic Solutions business. Chris brings extensive experience in large-scale integrations, having worked with me on the EMD Millipore Sigma-Aldrich merger which was the largest merger in life science tools at the time and delivered record sales growth and margin development. His proven ability to unify teams, integrate complex organizations and deliver outstanding results makes him exceptionally well suited to lead this critical task. With that, I will turn the call back to Caspar.