Thank you, John, and thank you for the kind words. Good morning, everyone. I'll turn you to Page four. Sales in the fourth quarter were in line with our expectations driven by strong performance in DES and CSS. Revenue was $6.1 billion, an increase of 10% year over year with organic sales up 9%. Growth was driven by approximately six points of volume and an estimated three points of price, including one point from commodities. CSS delivered 17% organic growth, EES grew 8%, and UBS organic sales increased by 3%. The increase in adjusted EBITDA was driven by higher sales. SG&A as a percentage of sales was essentially flat versus the prior year. Gross margin was 21.2%, in line with the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 6.7% of sales, and adjusted EBITDA was $409 million, up 10% year over year. Adjusted EPS grew 8% to $3.40. Turning to Page five. For the full year, sales were $23.5 billion, an increase of 8% with organic sales up 9%. Volume contributed approximately seven points while price provided an estimated two-point benefit, including about a point from commodities. Volume growth was strong across CSS and EES, with UBS momentum returning in the second half. Adjusted EBITDA increased 2% to $1.54 billion or 6.5% of sales. Gross margin was 21.1%, down 50 basis points versus 2024. The decline in gross margin reflects project and product mix, along with public power competitive pressures. Adjusted EBITDA margin also benefited from 10 basis points from operating leverage versus the prior year. Turning to Page six, I'll provide you the bridge on EPS versus the prior year. In the fourth quarter, adjusted EPS increased 8% to $3.40. The year-over-year improvement was driven primarily by strong operational execution as well as the benefit from the preferred stock redemption. Interest expense was higher than the prior year due to the issuance of the 2033 notes, which funded the preferred equity redemption, and a one-time adjustment to interest on taxes payable of approximately $10 million. In addition, the effective tax rate in the prior year period included several benefits from favorable adjustments creating a tougher comparison. Versus our expectations heading into the quarter, non-operating items were approximately $10 million higher due to the one-time interest expense that I just mentioned. There were also two unanticipated tax items in the quarter, but they netted to an immaterial impact. For the full year, adjusted EPS increased 6% to $12.91. The key drivers were consistent with the fourth quarter, including the absence of the preferred dividend, favorable FX impact, and a lower share count, all of which contributed positively to EPS growth. Contributions from operations were slightly negative year over year, reflecting pressure from lower gross margin. Interest and tax remained relatively stable contributors for the year. I'll walk you through our business unit results beginning with CSS on Slide seven. In the fourth quarter, CSS again delivered very strong results. With organic sales up 14% and reported sales up 16% year over year. This growth was driven by continued strength in WESCO data center solutions, where sales were up over 30% driven by strength across our hyperscale customer base. Enterprise network infrastructure also contributed to growth with sales up low single digits over the prior quarter. Security sales were up low double digits and including data center-related sales, the business grew mid-teens. Growth was driven by customers accelerating the shift from analog to digital systems with AI-enabled data center deployments, amplifying demand for our next-generation security solutions. CSS backlog increased nearly 40% ending the year at a record level and highlighting the continued strength of our data center business. Adjusted EBITDA for the CSS segment grew approximately 30% with adjusted EBITDA margin of 9.1%, up 90 basis points versus the prior year. This year-over-year expansion reflects higher gross margin and improved operating leverage on strong top-line growth. Gross margin was 21%, up 20 basis points year over year. Adjusted SG&A improved by 70 basis points to 11.9% of sales. For the full year, CSS reported sales were up 18% with organic sales up 17%. Growth was driven by exceptionally strong demand in our WESCO data center Solutions business, up over 50% for the year along with solid growth in security. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 50 basis points year over year, reflecting strong operating leverage on higher sales. Turning to Slide eight, I want to take a moment to discuss the continued strength we're seeing in the broader data center market and WESCO's expanding role in supporting this growth. Customers continue to rely on WESCO and our supplier partners to meet their evolving requirements and our capabilities now span an increasingly broad portion of the data center life cycle. From a total company perspective, data center sales were $4.3 billion for the full year, up approximately 50% and represented roughly 18% of WESCO International, Inc.'s 2025 sales. This growth was driven by strong performance across both gray space and white space environments, with CSS once again delivering the majority of the contribution. WESCO's capabilities now support every major phase of the data center life cycle. From power and electrical distribution infrastructure to advanced AI compute environments to on-site services that support construction, commissioning, and ongoing operations. This allows us to deliver value across the full investment cycle and to support our customers as their needs rapidly evolve. Looking ahead, we expect this momentum to continue as investment in digital infrastructure accelerates. With our comprehensive capabilities and deep customer partnerships, WESCO is well-positioned to capture additional share and support the next wave of data center growth. Turning to slide nine. This page highlights the breadth of WESCO's data center product, services, and solutions offerings. Our capabilities span both gray space and white space, enabling us to serve hyperscale, multi-tenant, colocation, and enterprise customers with a comprehensive portfolio. In the gray space, which represents roughly 20% of our total data center sales through our EES business, we provide the critical power, electrical, mechanical, automation, and MRO products required to support the construction and operation of high-performance scalable facilities. The white space, representing approximately 80% of our overall data center sales through CSS, includes our next-generation connectivity and IT infrastructure portfolio. Beyond products, our services offer spans the full life cycle of a data center. We support customers from early planning and design through installation, commissioning, and integration, all the way to ongoing operations, modernization programs, managed services, and ultimately decommissioning. This end-to-end capability allows us to help customers adapt quickly and execute at scale in a rapidly evolving environment. With our global ecosystem of suppliers and partners, WESCO provides a single coordinated source for the solutions required across the data center life cycle. We enable seamless execution across the globe to support customer timelines and project requirements. Taken together, our combination of products, services, and solutions, and deep technical expertise positions WESCO exceptionally well to continue capturing the strong secular growth in data center demand driven by cloud, AI, and edge computing. Together, these capabilities position WESCO as a trusted end-to-end partner for the world's leading data center operators. We remain well aligned to support the significant long-term growth in this market. Moving to Slide 10. For the fourth quarter, EES reported and organic sales were up 9% driven by growth across construction, industrial, and OEM, marking our third consecutive quarter of growth in these end markets. We are very pleased with the strong results in our EES segment as we exited the year. Construction sales were up low double digits in the fourth quarter, supported by strong wire and cable demand and continued infrastructure project activity. Industrial sales were up low single digits year over year with notable strength in Canada. OEM sales increased mid-teens. EES backlog was up 6% year over year, reflecting healthy underlying demand across the portfolio. EES adjusted EBITDA grew 16% versus the prior year with adjusted EBITDA margin expanding 50 basis points to 8.5%. This improvement reflects higher sales, favorable gross margin up 50 basis points year over year, and solid SG&A performance. For the full year, reported sales were up 7% with organic sales up 8% led by strong OEM and construction growth and improving industrial performance. Full year adjusted EBITDA was up 3% and adjusted EBITDA margin was down 30 basis points reflecting modest gross margin pressure driven by project activity and product mix, primarily in the first half, which was partially offset by disciplined SG&A management. Turning to slide 11. For the fourth quarter, UBS reported organic sales were up 3% year over year. Utility grew mid-single digits driven by strong double-digit growth at IOU customers, including higher sales from grid services, partially offset by continued softness with public power customers. Broadband declined high single digits versus the prior year due to a difficult prior year comparison. Growth within our IOU customer base returned in Q2 and has now continued for three straight quarters. As we've discussed throughout the year, we continue to see softness with our public power customers driven by inventory normalization and competitive pressures. Consistent with our commentary last quarter, we continue to expect public power customers will return to sales growth by the end of 2026. UBS backlog increased 23% year over year, supported by IOU project activity, and improving broadband trends providing a strong setup for 2026. Adjusted EBITDA margin was down approximately 120 basis points year over year, primarily reflecting lower gross margin driven by headwinds in Public Power. On a full-year basis, reported sales in UBS declined 5% with organic sales down 1%. Utility was down low single digits over the prior year driven primarily by lower public power activity. Broadband grew mid-single digits on continued network investments. Full-year EBITDA margin in UBS declined 90 basis points primarily reflecting competitive pressures in the public power market. We expect stronger UBS results in 2026, driven by IOU customers and grid services applications as our utility customers respond to the rising power demand curve. Turning to our Grid Services business on Slide 12. We want to provide you with additional insight on a growing part of our UBS business. Grid Services provides end-to-end execution, technical depth, and supply chain strength to help utilities and heavy power operators build, modernize, and reliably power critical grid infrastructure. This business generated over $300 million of revenue in 2025, and grew at a mid-single-digit rate. In 2026, we expect growth to accelerate to double digits. Our grid services team supports projects across distribution, medium voltage, transmission, and substation systems through a unified model that coordinates materials, logistics, and engineering services. In distribution, we supply conduit, poles, protective equipment, and other essentials needed to ensure reliable and resilient last-mile power delivery. In medium voltage, we provide power cable, connectivity, switching equipment, including pad mount cabinets and termination kits, to help customers operate medium voltage systems safely and efficiently. In transmission, we deliver the critical components required to build, harden, and modernize high voltage networks such as cable and conductor, insulators, poles, and structures. And in substations, we provide high voltage apparatus, steel structures, grounding systems, power and control cables, and other equipment that enhance grid reliability and support growing electrification demands. Behind these product offerings is a set of execution capabilities that enable us to deliver them reliably, and at scale. Our program and project execution teams coordinate planning, scheduling, and field execution, to keep critical work on track. Even amid industry-wide labor shortages and rising project complexity. Our supply chain and materials management organization helped to ensure reliable material availability through centralized sourcing, staging, kitting, and logistics to reduce scheduling risk for utilities, developers, and data center operators. Our technical and field support team provide product application and design support, qualified resources to help manage complex project portfolios, and in support of safe, efficient installation and startup across complex grid and large load projects. Collectively, we believe these capabilities give WESCO a durable, competitive edge. Reflected in four core strengths that shape how we execute for our customers. Our end-to-end model integrates program management, supply chain logistics, and technical support into a single solution reducing complexity, reducing handoffs, and accelerating power readiness and timeliness for utilities, data centers, and large load interconnects. Our scale and infrastructure provide reliable material availability, faster mobilization, and stronger security certainty advantages that materially improve project outcomes. We bring comprehensive high and medium voltage capabilities including apparatus management, prewired assemblies, and specialized advisory services, enabling us to help deliver complex grid modernization programs in large load interconnects. And we execute with exceptional speed. Leveraging dedicated partners and proven logistics and staging processes. Our grid services business plays a critical role in enabling power delivery readiness across the markets we serve including data centers and digital infrastructure, emerging markets, renewables and electrification, and utilities. In the data center market specifically, these same capabilities come together in a powerful way to our holistic power to compute model. This begins at the grid connection where our UBS team enables high capacity, utility-side power readiness. It continues through the building's gray space electrical infrastructure delivered through our EES business and it concludes inside the white space, where our CSS business provides a network infrastructure, connectivity, and compute-ready solutions that support cloud, enterprise, and hyperscale environments. Turning to page 13. Let me wrap up our discussion of 2025 with some comments on free cash flow. For the full year, we delivered $54 million of free cash. As a reminder, our distribution model naturally requires investment in working capital. Particularly in periods of elevated activity and strong sales growth. Fourth quarter results reflect higher accounts receivable, as well as a meaningful inventory build to support this growth. As shown in the waterfall chart on the left, accounts receivable and inventory increased during the year as we continue to drive organic sales growth well ahead of our midterm Investor Day target of 3% to 5%. In 2025, organic sales were up 9%. Turning to the right side of the slide, net working capital intensity remained under control. Net working capital as a percentage of sales was 20.1%, compared to 19.8% in 2024, and 21.4% in 2023. While the year-over-year comparison shows a modest increase, this movement was largely attributable to higher accounts receivable levels. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect net working capital to grow at roughly half the rate of sales which will further reduce net working capital as a percentage of sales and support stronger free cash flow conversion. Moving to Slide 14 and our 2026 outlook. Let me begin with the growth drivers by strategic business unit, and the individual operating groups. As John mentioned, we expect reported sales growth to be in the range of 5% to 8% in 2026, with organic sales between 4% to 7%. Starting with CSS, now represents approximately 39% of WESCO's revenue, we expect 2026 sales to be up high single digits plus. Data center remains the primary growth driver and as highlighted on this slide, we expect data center sales to be up mid-teens in 2026. We also expect security to contribute to growth supported by continued healthy end market demand. In enterprise network infrastructure, we expect improvement versus 2025 as market conditions stabilize and order activity continues to improve. Looking at our EES segment, we expect 2026 sales to be up mid-single digits. The improvement is expected to be broad-based across the segment with construction, industrial, and OEM each positioned for growth as demand trends continue to improve and project activity remains strong, driven by the secular growth trends. Lastly, looking at UBS, we expect 2026 sales to be up low to mid-single digits. This reflects an improvement from the headwinds we experienced in 2025 with better momentum in utility, particularly with investor-owned utilities along with double-digit growth in grid services. We expect sales to public power customers will return to growth by the end of the year. And we expect continued solid performance in broadband. And as we've discussed previously, the long-term fundamentals remain attractive. Given the significant underlying demand for grid modernization investment and increased generation, transmission, and distribution spending to support rising power needs. Moving to Page 15, let me walk you through the details of our outlook for 2026. Starting at the top of the page, as mentioned, our full-year 2026 outlook calls for reported sales growth of 5% to 8% with organic sales up 4% to 7%. We currently anticipate a one-point benefit from foreign exchange with no impact from M&A or workdays. Our outlook reflects the continued strength we are seeing in most end markets highlighted by robust data center demand and supported by improving trends across electrification, and other project-related activity. Looking at the sales drivers, our outlook includes approximately two to five points of volume, and two points of carryover pricing. As a reminder, our outlook does not include the impact of future pricing actions, including tariffs. This is consistent with our past practice given the timing lag between supplier notifications and revenue realization. Q4 price increase notifications were up over 125% in count year over year with the average increase in the mid-single-digit range. Through January, we continue to field a higher than average number of price increase notifications with the average increase in the mid-single-digit range. We expect adjusted EBITDA margin to be in the range of 6.6% to 7%. The midpoint of this range reflects progress on operating leverage and gross margin execution, balanced with ongoing investments in our technology-enabled business transformation and the mixed dynamics inherent in large project activity. We continue to see opportunities to expand margins through improved pricing discipline, better cost leverage, and the benefits of scale as volume grows. Moving down the page to EPS. Our outlook range for adjusted diluted EPS is $14.50 to $16.50, a growth rate of 20% at the midpoint driven primarily by improved operating performance. We have also provided key assumptions underlying our outlook. Consistent with historical results, cloud computing amortization and stock compensation are recognized as SG&A expense for the calculation of adjusted EPS and not included in adjusted EBITDA. Lastly, turning to free cash flow. We expect to deliver free cash flow of $500 million to $800 million in 2026. This reflects our expectation for improved cash generation versus 2025 as we continue to make progress on working capital initiatives with working capital growth at approximately half the rate of sales in 2026. Regarding capital allocation, our top priority remains investing organically in the business to drive growth and operational efficiency, including continued progress on our tech-enabled transformation. After funding these organic investments, we will focus on reducing debt. Beyond that, we will allocate remaining free cash flow to the highest return opportunities including disciplined and opportunistic share repurchases to offset annual equity dilution and selective strategic M&A that expands our capabilities in high-growth end markets. Finally, consistent with our commitment to shareholder returns, we plan to increase our annual common stock dividend by more than 10% to $2 per share or approximately $100 million on an annualized basis. Turning to slide 16. This slide shows the year-over-year monthly and quarterly sales growth comparisons over the past year. Along with our expectations for the first quarter. You can see the continued momentum in our business through 2025, with steady improvement across the year and a strong finish in the fourth quarter. As highlighted, preliminary January sales per workday are up approximately 15% reflecting continued positive demand trends across all business units with growth rates by SBU similar to what was experienced in Q4. Storm-related activity had an immaterial albeit negative impact on sales in January, which we expect to recover later in the quarter. For the first quarter, we expect reported sales to be up high single digits with growth across all three business units. Recall that January is the lowest revenue month for the quarter and the year and that March is the highest revenue month in the quarter. Organic sales are expected to be up a similar amount as there is no meaningful difference in workdays year over year and FX impacts remain modest. We expect adjusted EBITDA margin to be up versus the prior year driven by a combination of improved gross margin and operating leverage on the higher sales growth rate. In line with historical seasonality, Q1 sales are to be down low single digits sequentially. In addition, we experienced a reset in benefits costs and payroll taxes in Q1 versus Q4, which drives slightly higher costs sequentially. One last item to note is that the expected tax rate for the first quarter is approximately 25%. Historically, we see a favorable tax rate in Q1 versus the balance of the year. Moving to slide 17, we've covered a lot of material this morning, so let me briefly recap the key points before opening the call to your questions. We closed 2025 with strong top-line performance, driven by exceptional data center growth and strong results across EES, CSS, and improving trends in UBS. While free cash flow came in below expectations, we are acting decisively and we expect meaningful improvement in 2026 as working capital initiatives take hold. Looking ahead, we enter the year with record backlog, healthy demand across our most attractive end markets, and a 2026 outlook that calls for above-market growth, margin expansion, and stronger cash generation. With that operator, we can open the call to your questions.