Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'm here with Kyle Wismans, our Chief Financial Officer, and Ali-Ahmad Faghri, our Chief Strategy Officer. This morning, we reported another quarter of strong execution to close out the year. Company-wide, we delivered fourth-quarter adjusted EBITDA of $312 million and adjusted diluted EPS of $0.88. Excluding real estate gains in both periods, adjusted EBITDA increased 11% and adjusted EPS increased 18% year over year. In North American LTL, we generated adjusted operating income of $181 million, which was up 14% from the prior year. And we improved our adjusted operating ratio by 180 basis points, significantly outperforming normal seasonality. We've now expanded our LTL margin by 590 basis points since 2022, which marked the start of one of the most prolonged trade downturns in history. This speaks to the resilience of our strategy, and it will continue to serve us well this year and in the long term regardless of the cycle. The key components of our strategy are fully within our control, and I'll start with our most important lever, customer service. In 2025, we reduced damages and improved service quality to new company records, reflecting our focus on providing a superior customer experience. We're achieving this by balancing our network more precisely, reducing the number of freight rehandles, and implementing tighter operating processes at the service center level. And, critically, our stronger service performance is translating directly to better commercial outcomes. As a result, we've been able to earn higher prices and gain market share by providing consistent world-class service. When we make ongoing investments in the business, we're strengthening the connection between service quality and value creation. For example, we've deliberately invested in the network ahead of the upcycle to create more than 30% excess door capacity. This has given us the flexibility to operate more efficiently in the current environment, and we're positioned to respond quickly in a recovery. On the equipment side, our average sector age at year-end is 3.7 years, giving us one of the youngest fleets in the industry. This improves reliability and safety, reducing our maintenance cost per mile to the lowest level in our history. From a labor standpoint, we're staffed to support any near-term increases in demand while maintaining our high service levels. Combined with lower employee turnover and the national scale of our driver training schools, we're well-positioned to flex labor efficiently as volume grows. Each component of our capacity has a role in making sure we realize significant upside from our operating leverage when demand recovers. Next is pricing, which has a direct correlation to margin performance. Throughout 2025, we saw customers place more value on our service as reflected in the pricing gains we earn. For the full year, we grew yield excluding fuel by 6%. It was also the third consecutive year that we improved revenue per shipment for every quarter. In addition, the expansion we're driving with local customers and premium services is contributing to our above-market pricing growth. These revenue streams come with higher margins, and we see long runways for both core parts of our business. Another highlight of 2025 that contributed to margin was our improved cost efficiency. This was underpinned by productivity gains and a lower reliance on purchase transportation. Productivity improved roughly one and a half points for the year, with the ramp in the second half from our latest technology rollouts. These are proprietary applications that use AI for planning freight flow management and network operations. Importantly, we've completed a successful pilot of our AI-driven route optimization tools for pickup and delivery. And now with expanding this internally developed technology to nearly half of our service centers this quarter, we expect this to further reduce overall miles and improve stops per hour across a cost category of nearly $900 million. And on purchase transportation, we exited the year with the lowest level of outsourced miles in our company's history, at 5.1% of total miles. This has given us greater control over service quality and a more flexible cost structure. These cost efficiencies will scale with volume, and we expect the benefits to margin to grow over time. To sum it up, we entered 2026 from a position of strength, following a year of significant progress and outperformance. While we're pleased to have reported above-market results for another four quarters, we have multiple drivers to improve our LTL operating ratio well into the seventies in the years to come, and a substantial expansion of our operating margin. Number one is pricing. We see a double-digit opportunity to surpass the market in pricing growth over time by continuing to enhance service quality and revenue mix. Another key is our investment in capacity ahead of the cycle. We've built excess capacity across our network, positioning us for profitable share gains and operating leverage as demand recovers. And we have a long runway to improve cost efficiency and productivity for network applications of AI at scale. These are all high-impact initiatives that are already driving results. Importantly, our progress will be amplified by the billions of dollars of cumulative free cash flow we expect to generate in the coming years, starting with a meaningful acceleration in 2026. We'll fund an increase in share repurchases and debt reduction to further compound our earnings growth. With that, I'll turn it over to Kyle to walk through the financials. Kyle, over to you.