Thank you, Ira, and good afternoon, everyone. Before I begin, I want to say how grateful I am to be joining you today for my first earnings call as CFO during a period of meaningful transition for the company. As many of you know, I've worked close with Ira and our leadership team for many years. And stepping into this role, my focus is clear: provide greater transparency around our underlying performance and a clear line of sight into long-term value creation. Before reviewing our results, I want to briefly address our use of non-GAAP measures. As Ira discussed, 2025 was a year of meaningful transition for World Kinect. Over the course of the year, we took deliberate actions to reshape our portfolio, exiting noncore and underperforming activities and refocusing the company on businesses that deliver improved operating leverage, stronger cash flow and returns on capital. As a result, our GAAP results this quarter reflect additional actions we have taken to further improve the quality and durability of our future earnings. Reconciliations are available on our Investor Relations website and in today's webcast materials. Total non-GAAP adjustments in the fourth quarter were $325 million or $296 million after tax. The most significant of which was $247 million of noncash intangible and other asset impairments, primarily within our land segment. These impairments were driven in large part by our decision to exit additional lines of businesses -- a business that did not meet our return thresholds or align with our long-term strategy. We also recorded an additional $77 million of restructuring and exit-related charges in the quarter, also largely tied to these land exits as well as broader transformation initiatives we have previously discussed. While the majority of the financial impact from our portfolio repositioning is now behind us, we anticipate some residual nonrecurring exit-related costs into the first half of 2026 as the remaining transactions close and activities wind down. Importantly, these actions substantially complete the land portfolio repositioning we began in late 2024 and position us in 2026 with a stronger earnings base and improved visibility. With that context, let's turn to our operating results, which exclude these non-GAAP adjustments. On a consolidated basis, fourth quarter volume was 4.2 billion gallons, down 5% year-over-year. For the full year, volume totaled 16.9 billion gallons, down approximately 4%. Fourth quarter gross profit was $235 million, down 9% year-over-year and slightly below guidance, driven primarily by lower profit contribution in our land business. For the full year, consolidated gross profit was $948 million, down 8% from 2024. This reflects year-over-year declines in marine and land gross profits of 21% and 22%, respectively, partially offset by strong growth in aviation. I'll now walk through each segment to provide more details on the quarter and the full year. Starting with Aviation. In the fourth quarter, aviation volumes were 1.8 billion gallons, down 5% year-over-year as a result of more disciplined focus on maintaining appropriate return levels. Full year aviation volume was 7.1 billion gallons, modestly lower than the prior year. Despite lower volumes, fourth quarter aviation gross profit increased approximately 8% year-over-year to $130 million, driven principally by incremental profit contribution from the Universal Trip Support acquisition completed in November. Overall, however, results in our core fuel business were slightly weaker than anticipated, driven by increased competitive pressure impacting our margin versus what we have been experiencing for much of the year, which have been running above our historical average. For the full year, aviation gross profit totaled $526 million, up 8% year-over-year. As we look ahead to 2026, we expect first quarter aviation gross profit to be up year-over-year, driven by the benefits of our Trip Support acquisition and continued organic growth internationally, which we expect to more than offset continued competitive pressure. Aviation remains the cornerstone of our portfolio, supported by a strong global network, expanding service capabilities and attractive long-term demand fundamentals. Shifting to Land. In the fourth quarter, land volumes declined 9% year-over-year. And for the full year, land volumes totaled 5.6 billion gallons, down 8%. These declines were primarily driven by our exit activities as we deliberately reduced exposure and have been exiting underperforming and noncore businesses. Fourth quarter land gross profit was $71 million, down 32% year-over-year and slightly below our expectations, driven principally by unfavorable market conditions impacting certain noncore businesses, some near-term impacts of our strategic exit from these activities as well as the impacts from businesses we have already exited, including Brazil, certain operations in North America at the end of 2024 as well as our U.K. land business in the second quarter of 2025. For the full year, land gross profit was $298 million, down 22%, largely driven by unfavorable market conditions in our European power business and parts of our North America liquid fuels business, noncore activities we are in the process of exiting as well as the impact of businesses we had exited at the end of 2024 and earlier in 2025. Additionally, as Ira mentioned, as part of our exit activities, we recently entered into an agreement to sell our North American tank wagon delivery and lubricants businesses. While we recorded associated noncash impairment charges of $85 million in the fourth quarter, we expect the transaction upon closing to return approximately $100 million of capital to the business through sales proceeds and the recovery of working capital. While near-term results were below our target levels, the actions we have taken meaningfully improved the quality of expected returns of the land business. Going forward, land will be focused primarily in North America across 3 core areas: cardlock, retail and natural gas. This business model currently represents 5 billion gallon equivalents with $2 billion coming from natural gas, which is a high volume but lower unit margin business. As I mentioned before, we expect some residual nonrecurring exit-related activity to continue into the first half of 2026 as we focus on completing the remaining exits and supporting our customers through this transition. As we look ahead to 2026, while we expect full year volumes and gross profit in our refocused land business to be meaningfully lower year-over-year, we expect adjusted operating income to nearly double as a result of exiting these underperforming land businesses, resulting in a materially improved and simplified cost structure. It's important to note that our operating margin in the land business should increase substantially and get much closer to our target level of 30%. In Marine, volumes were approximately 4.1 million metric tons in the fourth quarter, flat year-over-year, while full year volumes declined 5%. Fourth quarter marine gross profit increased 2% year-over-year to $35 million, driven by strong performance in certain physical locations. However, full year gross profit declined 21%, reflecting the continued low fuel price and volatility environment. Despite these conditions, Marine continues to generate attractive returns while requiring minimal capital investment. The business remains well positioned to benefit when the market volatility improves, providing meaningful upside optionality over time. For Marine, we expect first quarter gross profit to be generally in line with prior year. On a consolidated basis, as we look toward the first quarter and with the backdrop of the related segment gross profit comments shared a moment ago, we expect consolidated gross profit to be down versus prior year and sequentially, driven principally by the exit activity in land. Moving on to operating expenses. Adjusted operating expenses in the fourth quarter were $186 million, down 6% year-over-year, primarily due to lower incentive compensation as well as the exit of certain businesses in our Land segment, which we have previously discussed. For the full year, adjusted operating expenses declined approximately 7% to $718 million. This reflects not only performance-related compensation impacts, but also our continued focus on operating efficiency. As we move forward, we expect further benefits from the strategic repositioning of the Land segment alongside continued investment in our platforms to ensure we enhance the customer experience while creating greater efficiencies. Additionally, we are also focused on improving our operating leverage through the use of advanced analytics and AI-enabled tools. For the first quarter of 2026, we expect operating expenses to be down versus prior year and sequentially when adjusted for residual land exit-related activity, driven primarily by the improved cost base in land as well as the additional focused efforts we've been making to restructure the organization. These benefits are partially offset by the incremental operating expenses associated with our Universal Trip Support acquisition. Net interest expense in the fourth quarter was $26 million, in line with expectations. During the quarter, we amended and extended our $2 billion senior unsecured credit facility to November 2030 with a 1-year extension option. The amended facility improves pricing and flexibility and reinforces our strong liquidity position as we continue to execute on our strategy. Our adjusted effective tax rate was 29% for the quarter, resulting in a full year adjusted effective tax rate of 20%, in line with the guidance we provided. Before turning to cash flow, I want to spend a moment on an important change to how we will provide financial guidance this year. For 2026, while we will continue to share insight into anticipated quarterly segment performance, we are transitioning to provide full year adjusted EPS guidance. We believe this approach better reflects how we manage the business, accounts for seasonality and market volatility and provides investors with a clearer and more consistent framework for evaluating our performance. With the backdrop of everything we have covered and driven by the market conditions and business changes referenced in the fourth quarter, we expect the first quarter EPS to be down versus prior year and relatively flat sequentially. For the full year, however, we expect 2026 adjusted EPS to be in the range of $2.20 to $2.40, representing solid year-over-year growth and reflecting the benefits of our portfolio actions and disciplined execution. Looking next at our cash flow and capital allocation. In the fourth quarter, we generated $34 million of operating cash flow and $13 million of free cash flow. For the full year, operating cash flow totaled $293 million, slightly ahead of our expectations, while free cash flow came in at $227 million, exceeding our targets for the year. Combined with 2024, we have generated $419 million of free cash flow, also ahead of our long-term objectives. Strong cash generation enabled us to continue to return capital to our shareholders. In the fourth quarter, we repurchased $40 million of shares, bringing full year repurchases to $85 million. Total capital return through dividends and buybacks in 2025 was $126 million. Additionally, our Board recently approved an incremental $150 million share repurchase authorization. And subsequent to year-end, we completed an additional $75 million in share repurchases, underscoring our confidence in the business and our disciplined approach to capital allocation. As we look ahead, I'll leave you with a few key points. Aviation remains the foundation of our portfolio, delivering strong results in 2025 while expanding our international presence and global service offerings. While we expect some increased competitive pressure versus 2025, the core business is strong and remains positioned for sustainable growth. Land reached a turning point in 2025. We simplified the portfolio, reset the earnings base and improved long-term return potential. We expect continued improvement as we move through 2026 with stronger operating margins and a significant increase in operating income. Marine continues to demonstrate resilience, generating attractive baseline returns and offering significant upside when market conditions improve. Financial discipline remains central to how we operate from cost management to capital allocation. Most importantly, however, we enter 2026 with a simpler and more focused World Kinect with clear priorities and improved visibility into earnings growth. Looking ahead, our focus is on disciplined execution, strong cash flow generation and continued progress toward our long-term margin and return objectives. Additionally, as we operate a simpler and more focused portfolio, we will strive to increase the transparency of our business model and our expectations of the business at the segment as well as at the consolidated level. With that, I'll turn the call to Latif for the Q&A session. Thank you.