Thank you, Jason, and good morning, everyone. This morning, we reported AFFO per diluted share of $1.19 for the 2023 fourth quarter and $5.18 for the full year, which were 7.8% and 2.1% lower versus the prior year periods, respectively, driven by our exit from office assets, including the spin-off of NLOP in early November. During the fourth quarter, we sold 17 properties for gross proceeds of $266 million including the sale of 7 properties for $132 million under our Office Sale program, bringing total dispositions for the year to $462 million. Our fourth quarter disposition activity also included the sale of five Marriott Hotel operating properties for $84 million. We've now sold 8 of the 12 Marriott Hotels that converted from net lease to operating properties in January of 2023, and we expect to sell one additional Marriott Hotel this year. The remaining three will be held for redevelopment over the next few years, but will continue as operating properties throughout 2024. In January of this year, I'm pleased to say we completed the sale of our largest office asset, State of Andalusia portfolio for approximately $360 million. This, along with the sale of another office asset in January, brings gross proceeds under the Office Sales program in 2024 to $388 million and the total to date to $608 million. Looking ahead to 2024, our guidance assumes office sales totaling between $550 million and $600 million including the $388 million already completed with the remaining sales under the program weighted to the first half of the year. Our disposition guidance also includes the sale of the U-Haul net lease self-storage portfolio through the exercise of its purchase option for approximately $465 million. We expect to receive the proceeds in tranches during the first quarter and have collected the full first quarter of rent on the portfolio totaling $9.7 million. Ordinary course dispositions in 2024 are expected to total between $150 million and $350 million, which includes the Marriott operating hotel I mentioned earlier. During 2023, our net lease portfolio continued to benefit from the high proportion of rents generated from leases with increases tied to inflation, even as inflation remained well below its 2022 peak both in the U.S. and Europe. This is reflected in the 4.1% year-over-year contractual same rent growth we reported for the fourth quarter. Based on current inflation forecasts, we expect our contractual same-store rent growth to be close 3% for the 2024 first quarter and moderate to an average in the mid to high 2s for the full year. Comprehensive same-store rent growth was 2.3% year-over-year for the fourth quarter driven lower by the lease expiration on a large warehouse property, which previously generated ABR of $6.2 million. This vacancy also reduced our net lease portfolio occupancy to 98.1% at year-end. As we work to re-tenant the property over the near-term. We are currently in active negotiations to re-lease the property at or potentially slightly above the prior in place rent, although our guidance assumes downtime on the property for most of 2024. While our historical with rent loss has been relatively negligible, our outlook for 2024 reflects our expectations on two specific assets which we're closely monitoring. First, we are proactively working with one of our top 10 tenants, Hellweg, a do it yourself retailer in Europe to restructure and extend its leases as it works to improve its financial position. Although this is a developing situation, our guidance currently assumes a rent abatement on this portfolio for the first quarter totaling $7.5 million and a reduction in annual rent going forward from approximately $30 million of ABR to an estimated $26 million. Second, the tenant of four cold storage and fruit packing facilities we own in Central Valley, California, which produces $5.2 million of ABR, has been operating in bankruptcy. While the tenant is current on rent through the end of February, we expect our lease to be rejected. Our guidance therefore assumes no additional rents from this tenant in 2024 as we work through a resolution and carry the properties vacant. In aggregate, our guidance assumes these two tenant situations have an estimated $0.07 impact on our 2024 AFFO through a combination of lost rent and carrying costs partly offset by lower income taxes. Incremental to this, our guidance includes a normal course rent contingency of around 70 basis points of ABR. Other lease related income for the 2023 fourth quarter was $2.6 million bringing the full year total to $23.3 million slightly below our expectations as certain lease related negotiations were pushed into 2024. For the 2024 full year, we are currently this line item to total in the low to mid $20 million range with visibility into almost half of that based on negotiations currently in process. Our operating property portfolio currently comprises 89 self-storage properties, 5 hotels and 2 student housing properties, which are expected to generate between $85 million and $90 million of NOI in 2024 with approximately 80% coming from self-storage. Our 2024 guidance assumes same-store NOI from our operating self-storage portfolio is relatively flat to the prior year. Asset management fees and reimbursements totaled $2.1 million for the fourth quarter, primarily reflecting a partial period as the external manager of NLOP. For 2024, we expect our administrative reimbursement from NLOP to total $4 million, which is fixed over time, while our asset management fees are expected to total between $5 million and $7 million, declining over the course of the year with asset sales. As a reminder, both of these items have no impact on our G&A expense. Non-operating income totaled $7.4 million for the fourth quarter, driven primarily by $4.6 million of interest income on cash and realized gains on currency hedges of $2.9 million. For the full year, non-operating income totaled $21.4 million comprised of $14.5 million in realized gains from currency hedges and $6.9 million of interest income. Our 2024 guidance assumes non-operating income totaling between $32 million and $36 million, including interest income on cash totaling between $19 million and $23 million, which is expected to be higher early in the year and decline as we invest this cash. It also assumes that currency rates remain at or around their current levels, which would result in expected gains from currency hedges of approximately $10 million. Our 2024 guidance also includes a $3 million dividend from Lineage Logistics, which we received in January of this year and will flow through non-operating income in the first quarter. Non-reimbursed property expenses for the fourth quarter were $13.3 million bringing the full year total to $44.5 million, which included a property tax accrual reversal approximately $6 million early in 2023. For 2024, we expect non-reimbursed property expenses to total between $41million and $45 million, reflecting a reduction in expenses associated with the office assets we have exited partly offset by an expected increase in carrying costs related to the vacancies, which I discussed earlier. G&A expense was $21.5 million for the fourth quarter, bringing the full year total to $96 million. For 2024, we expect G&A to fall between $100 million and $103 million, reflecting inflationary increases. G&A expense typically trends higher in the first quarter, given the timing of certain payroll-related items. Tax expense on a cash or AFFO basis, which primarily reflects foreign taxes on our European assets totaled $11.2 million for the fourth quarter and $44.3 million for 2023. For 2024, we are anticipating these taxes total between $38 million and $42 million in our guidance. Turning now to our 2024 guidance. We expect to generate full year AFFO per share between $4.65 and $4.75, with the decline versus 2023, driven primarily by the full year impact of the NLOP spin-off, and the completion of the Office Sale program. Guidance assumes full year investment volume of between $1.5 billion and $2 billion and reflects the timing of investments and dispositions with volume expected to be more back-end weighted, while dispositions are more front-end weighted, driven primarily by the State of Andalusia office portfolio sale and the U-Haul purchase option. Moving to our capital markets activity and balance sheet. We settled all outstanding equity forwards during the fourth quarter, issuing 4.7 million shares for net proceeds of $384 million shortly before the NLOP spin-off. In December, we completed the recast of our unsecured credit facility, pushing out the maturity on a significant portion of debt maturing over the next few years. We upsized our existing multicurrency revolver from $1.8 billion to $2 billion and pushed its term out four years to February of 2029. As part of the recast, we also refinanced our euro term loan and a pound sterling term loan, extending their maturities three years to February of 2028, with the option to extend for a further year subject to certain conditions. The extension and upsizing of our credit facility demonstrates the continued strength and flexibility of our balance sheet as well as the breadth of our valued banking relationships with 16 lenders participating. It also enhances our liquidity, further supporting accretive external growth going forward. Turning now to the strength of our liquidity position. During the fourth quarter, the significant amount of capital came back to us, including the distribution we received as part of the spin-off of NLOP and from the settlement of all outstanding equity forwards. We ended 2023 with total liquidity of $2.2 billion, including $634 million of cash. We expect our liquidity position to further increase during the first quarter, driven primarily by proceeds from the office sale program and the U-Haul disposition. As a result, we will remain exceptionally well-positioned to both fund our acquisitions and manage our debt maturities in 2024, which, as Jason noted, gives us plenty of flexibility and allows us to be very opportunistic when we choose to access the capital markets. At year-end, our leverage metrics remained well within our target ranges with debt to gross assets at 41.6%, which is at the low end of our target range of mid- to low 40s. Net debt-to-EBITDA was 5.6x relative to our target range of mid to high 5x, although we expect it to be in the low 5s during the first half of 2024 as disposition proceeds are redeployed into new investments before returning to our targeted range in the second half. Lastly, regarding our dividend. During the fourth quarter, we reset our dividend about 20% lower to $0.86 per share reflecting the impact of office exit strategy on AFFO and the lower targeted payout ratio, reducing our target payout ratio to a low to mid-70% range enables us to retain and accretively reinvest greater internally generated cash flow. Going forward, the intention is to grow our dividend in line with our AFFO, which we anticipate will be our dividend growth compared to recent years. In closing, 2024 is a transitional year, primarily reflecting the execution of our office exit strategy and establishing a new baseline from which to grow our AFFO in forward. We believe we're very well positioned to generate FFO growth over both the near term and long-term, supported by an improving investment environment, a strong balance sheet and an exceptional liquidity position as well as the embedded rent growth within our portfolio of high-quality, primarily warehouse and industrial net lease assets. And with that, I hand the call back to the operator for questions.