Good afternoon, and welcome to The Western Union Company's first quarter 2025 financial results conference call. Today, we reported a reasonable quarter against a difficult macro backdrop as we continue to implement our evolved 2025 strategy, which, as you recall, is focused on returning The Western Union Company to sustainable profitable revenue growth. Our strategy is to become a customer-centric company by reversing many years of uncompetitiveness due to overpricing, underinvestment, poor execution, and slow responsiveness to market trends. We've been implementing this strategy while also maintaining our above-average margins, our commitment to our dividend, and paying down our deferred tax obligations. This quarter marks the seventh consecutive quarter of above 3% transaction growth for the company, when excluding Iraq, Russia, and Belarus. The company has not delivered this level of consistent transaction growth in over a decade. As we continue to implement our strategy and become more competitive, we see the potential for future share gains in many regions around the world. We have made significant progress on realigning our market position, improving our customer and agent experience, and building out our non-consumer money transfer businesses. Where we have gotten this right, like in Europe, we now see strong mid-single-digit revenue growth and double-digit transaction growth. A good result in a competitive market that would have been unimaginable three years ago. Broadly speaking, Q1 results show a continuation of the trends we saw in the fourth quarter and demonstrate the value of our globally diversified business. While the Americas continued to struggle with geopolitical headwinds, the rest of the world, which represents 50% of our money transfer revenues, continued to perform well with double-digit transaction growth in all three underlying regions. We did see some deceleration in the Americas, with North America transaction growth about 100 basis points lower in Q1 than the previous quarter, and LACA about 200 basis points lower. The rate of change in the Americas slowed dramatically, with most of the slowdown happening in the third and fourth quarter of last year. This should set us up for easier comparisons as we get into the back half of the year. For the first quarter, our revenue came in at $984 million. Adjusted revenue, excluding Iraq, declined 2% with a 100 basis points drag from the difficult comparison against the leap year last year. Overall transaction growth was 3%, and cross-border principal growth was 10% on a constant currency ex-Iraq basis, speaking to the resilience of our customer base around the world. While our retail business in the Americas continued to face headwinds associated with the current geopolitical environment, our retail business in Europe is strong, with transaction growth of 10%, which led to regional revenue growth of 5%. Our branded digital business also continues to perform well with 14% transaction growth and 8% adjusted revenue growth in the quarter. Consumer services adjusted revenue was down slightly in the quarter, as our bill payment business in Latin America was off double digits, and the first quarter is a seasonably slow quarter for both our advertising business and for European travel, which is the driver of our expanding FX business. We expect both businesses to have meaningfully better results in the coming quarters. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $0.41, or down $0.04 relative to this quarter a year ago. A decent result as Q1 2024 benefited meaningfully from higher revenues and operating profits from Iraq, which were not repeated in the current quarter. Our discipline in managing capital and operating costs is starting to come through. Matt will discuss our first quarter financial results and 2025 outlook in more detail later in the call. Our vision is to be a globally diversified provider of everyday financial services to the aspiring populations of the world. We want to be the company that helps everyday people achieve their dreams through better financial products and services. It is one of the reasons that I am excited about our recently announced acquisition of Eurochange. It gives us another building block at the top of our distribution strategy in an important market like the United Kingdom, delivering high-quality products and services in an omnichannel manner. Our European team is leading the way with the implementation of our controlled distribution strategy. Eurochange will help us accelerate that strategy in the United Kingdom. Now switching to the Americas. As we discussed last year, migration patterns continue to change across this region, and we have felt the effects in our financial results. These changes began in the second half of last year and have continued throughout this quarter. Our North American business was consistent in the fourth quarter after considering the headwind from the leap year, while our Latin American business has continued to slow. Migration across Latin America has been slowing for several quarters, and the first quarter was a continuation of those trends. Slower migration levels in the region have led to lower Intralaca remittance volumes. Looking at Ecuador, for example, outbound remittances in the most recent central bank data were off 25% year over year. We've also seen slowing in the outbound trends in central bank data across other important Latin American countries, like Mexico, Colombia, and Bolivia. North America performed largely in line with our expectations in the quarter. Transactions were down about 1.5% in Q1, which was about 100 basis points slower than the fourth quarter. Principal per transaction in North America was up mid-single digits in the quarter as customers sent more money per transaction at less frequent intervals. As mentioned in the last quarter, most of the slowdown in North America is coming in our retail business and is centered on the US to Mexico corridor. When we look at US outbound to Latin America more broadly, across all channels, and excluding Mexico, we see transactions are up 2% year over year, and revenue is flat in the quarter. Both statistics show negative trends on the retail side but solid growth in digital. Stepping out even further, looking at US outbound to the rest of the world, excluding Mexico, we see transaction growth of 2.5% with a similar breakdown across channels, softer in retail, supported by strong digital. We are not as far along in the transformation of our US retail business as we are in Europe, and in a tough macro environment, it does show. Exiting Russia and losing two large agents accelerated our efforts throughout Europe in 2022, 2023, and 2024. From our learnings there, we know we need to more aggressively focus on driving North American agent productivity, implementing our tactical pricing strategy, and strengthening our distribution in both exclusive and non-exclusive channels. The North American team is hard at work to accelerate this playbook this year in the region. If we step outside of the Americas, a brighter picture comes into focus. As we obviously have seen the benefit of a globally diversified business, with the European, Middle East, and APAC regions, which account for 50% of CMT revenue, all performing reasonably well. Europe accelerated positively in the first quarter on both transactions and revenue, and all three regions reported double-digit transaction growth in the quarter when excluding Iraq from the Middle East results. Sticking with the Middle East for a moment, we have a lot of momentum in the region, driven by our long-term partnership with STC, which recently launched as a licensed bank in Saudi Arabia. We also have multiple new partnerships in the region, including two additional partnerships in Saudi. In addition to Saudi Arabia, we are spending a lot of time in the UAE, which is one of the top ten remittance markets in the world. We are expanding our investments in our digital channel in the country and have begun to ramp our recently launched partnership with DuPay to provide cross-border remittance services. We believe the Middle East is a big opportunity for The Western Union Company, and we look forward to continuing to expand our presence in the region. Now shifting to Europe. After multiple years of negative trends in the region associated with the conflict in Ukraine and the loss of two large agents, our European business is delivering strong performance for the company. The change in trajectory is being driven by the hyperlocal nature of the retail business, which has shifted from a high reliance on large strategic accounts to a more diversified approach with our strategic agents at the base, supported by a very competitive and robust independent agent network, complemented by a small number of owned and agent-controlled concept stores in high-volume locations. Our owned and concept stores in Europe are now approaching 500 locations with continued internal expansion as well as the recently announced acquisition of Eurochange in the UK. The Eurochange acquisition will bring in-house a long-standing partner and will allow us to expand our FX services with over 200 owned locations in the country and 100-plus partner locations throughout the United Kingdom. We are excited about the opportunity to expand our cross-border travel money business. Our core customers, by definition, are travelers. They leave home and travel in search of economic opportunities, many times over great distances. When they return home, they almost always bring money back with them. In remittance parlance, this is often referred to as the informal market. It is for this reason that many of our agents around the world offer foreign exchange services alongside The Western Union Company consumer money transfer. We believe we have a natural right to play in this market and that our brand is well-positioned. However, and potentially more important, our core customers are not the only people who travel internationally. Adding foreign exchange services allows us to expand our customer base to a higher-income demographic with a product that our brand is already positioned to provide. Finally, we believe the travel money segment will continue to grow as consumers prioritize travel and new experiences with their discretionary income, and we know the local currency in hand remains an important element for non-business consumer travel. This acquisition complements our strategy across continental Europe with travel money services now in Spain and Italy, with Germany soon on the horizon. We also offer travel money services in Singapore and several countries in Latin America, as we look to leverage our controlled distribution strategy by providing multiple financial products and services in each location. We believe that by the end of the year, our travel money segment could be the largest business inside our consumer services segment, surpassing our retail money order business and both our North American and Latin American bill pay businesses. In conclusion, we remain pleased with the progress of our business against a tough macro backdrop in the Americas. From a regional perspective, while North America and Latin America are facing headwinds, Europe, the Middle East, ex-Iraq, and APAC continue to perform well, which highlights the value of a globally diversified business and gives us optimism about what we can accomplish in the remainder of 2025 and beyond. I believe that we are tracking well to achieve our evolved 2025 goals and are setting the company up for a more prosperous future. Thank you for joining the call today. I will now turn over to Matt to discuss our financial results in the quarter in more detail.