Good afternoon, everyone. And thank you for joining us today as we review our results for the calendar year 2025. Here with me are Xia Liu, our chief financial officer, and Beth Straka, senior vice president of corporate communications and investor relations. As you saw from our news release this morning, we reported full-year 2025 adjusted earnings of $5.27 a share. This excludes a one-time charge of 46¢ per share related to a proposed settlement in Illinois. We expect the settlement will fully resolve all open reconciliation dockets on rider QIP spending from 2017 to the rider sunset in 2023. It will also resolve all open reconciliations of the uncollectible rider for the period 2019 through 2023. I'll provide more details on this in a few minutes. Across the company, I'm pleased to report that we delivered another year of solid results in virtually every meaningful measure. From customer satisfaction to financial performance to steady execution of our capital plan. In just a few minutes, Shaw will provide more details on our financial results and outlook. But first, let me highlight the strong economic growth in our region that's driving our robust capital plan. There have been many exciting announcements and developments in our state. Microsoft is making good progress on its large data center complex, with more than 2,000 acres purchased to date. We have energy flowing to the site, and the first phase of the project is expected to go online this year. Just last week, Microsoft received approval from local officials to expand the campus further with 15 additional data center buildings. Based on our updated plan, we are adding 500 megawatts of customer demand to the forecast. This is resulting in an estimated $1 billion of additional incremental capital to our capital plan. This brings our forecasted demand in the I-94 Corridor up to 2.6 gigawatts through 2030. Microsoft continues to be a great partner to work with. In a January statement, referred to as its community-first AI infrastructure plan, Microsoft pledged to be a good neighbor where it's building data centers. This includes paying its share for electricity, minimizing water use, creating jobs, adding to the tax base, and investing in the community. And to the north, we have another great partner. You'll recall that Vantage data centers have signed on to develop facilities for Oracle and OpenAI on approximately 1,900 acres. In December, Vantage broke ground on the initial phase of the project, which is planned for 670 acres. Vantage has stated that it expects to invest $15 billion to complete this phase in 2028. The first facility could come online late next year. We currently have 1.3 gigawatts of demand for this Vantage site in our forecast over the next five years, and looking to the future, this site has the potential to reach 3.5 gigawatts of demand over time. We are seeing an increase in local investment by other large businesses as well. For example, south of Milwaukee, Foxconn has announced new plans to renovate and expand its Racine County campus. With a focus on manufacturing data center components, Foxconn expects to invest more than a half billion dollars in this expansion and add more than 1,300 jobs at the site. In addition, Rockwell Automation plans in November to build a new manufacturing site in southeastern Wisconsin. The facility is expected to span more than a million square feet, and Rockwell announced this site could potentially become the company's largest manufacturing campus globally. And Uline, the leading North American distributor of shipping, industrial, and packaging materials, completed yet another large land purchase to further expand its business operations in Southeast Wisconsin. In summary, with the expansion of Microsoft, we are now projecting 2.6 gigawatts of growth in the I-94 Corridor and 1.3 gigawatts to the north of Milwaukee, for a total of 3.9 gigawatts of electric demand growth in our five-year plan. And to meet our region's growing energy needs, we are focused on executing our updated $37.5 billion capital plan over the next five years. We are projecting long-term earnings per share growth of 7% to 8% a year on a compound annual basis between 2026 and 2030. This is based on the midpoint of our 2025 adjusted guidance. We expect that growth to accelerate to the upper half of the range starting in 2028 as we put more projects into service. Our electric utilities need to maintain a reliable, balanced generation mix. Between 2026 and 2030, we expect to invest a total of $7.4 billion in modern, efficient, natural gas generation and LNG storage. This includes combustion turbines, rice units, and upgrades to existing facilities. We have a strong labor force lined up to bring our projects online. At our Oak Creek site, construction on our new five-unit 1,100-megawatt combustion turbine project is well underway. We also broke ground on a large two BCF LNG facility and our seven-unit Paris Rice generation site in the fourth quarter. In renewables, over the next five years, we expect to invest $12.6 billion to add 6,500 megawatts to our generation fleet. We currently have seven renewable generation projects and two battery storage facilities under construction, including two solar facilities expected to come online later this year. Overall, we have a lot of confidence in our ability to execute on our capital plan and continue our growth trajectory. Turning to regulatory matters, I have a few updates on current and upcoming rate reviews. First, let's update you on our Wisconsin and our proposed very large customer tariff. As we discussed before, this tariff is designed to meet the needs of our various large load customers while protecting all of our other customers and investors. The proposed tariff remains with the Public Service Commission for review. Staff and intervenor testimony was submitted in January. A commission order is expected in early May for customers to take service under the tariff in June. In April, we plan to file rate reviews in Wisconsin for forward-looking test years 2027 and 2028. We are currently pulling that filing together. And in Illinois, as I mentioned earlier, Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas reached agreements on the terms of a proposed settlement with the Illinois attorney general. That, if approved by the Illinois Commerce Commission, would resolve all issues related to 12 pending cases. These cases represent approximately $2.3 billion of open dockets and include the rider QIP reconciliation from 2017 to 2023, in the uncollectible rider cases 2019 through 2023. The proposed settlement terms call for a $130 million rate base reduction, which would be prospective with new rates in the pending Peoples Gas case. In addition, customers would receive a $125 million over three years. This settlement is subject to commission approval we anticipate requesting in the coming weeks. In early January, we filed a rate request in Illinois for test year 2027. A key driver of this request is to support the PIPE retirement program in Chicago. As you'll recall, the company ordered all cast iron and ductile iron pipe under 36 inches in diameter to be retired by 2034. We expect the commission's review of our filing to last eleven months with new rates starting 01/01/2027. Of course, we'll keep you updated on any future developments. Next up, Shaul will provide you with more details on our financials.