Thanks, Chris, and good morning, everyone. I'm excited to share our results today and to connect with many of you in the months ahead. It is an honor to transition to the CFO role, having served as Yum!'s Chief Strategy Officer and Treasurer. My connection with Yum! goes back more than 15 years. I partnered with Chris during my time at Goldman Sachs, where I was Yum!'s strategic adviser. And prior to Chris, I partnered with David Gibbs, Greg Creed and David Novak during their tenures, giving me a deep appreciation for Yum!'s enduring brands, franchise partners and talent. Prior to joining Yum!, during my time as CFO at Goldbelly, I guided the company from being a tech start-up to being a capital-efficient high-growth retailer, reinforcing my belief in the power of evolution. It's an energizing time to step into this role as Yum! strengthens its position as the global franchisor of choice. The QSR industry is evolving rapidly. Scale and technology are defining success around the world, and these shifts play directly into Yum!'s strengths. I look forward to continue working with Chris to advance our strategic priorities and drive sustainable growth for our franchisees and shareholders. I'll start with third quarter results before discussing Yum!'s balance sheet and liquidity position, the Taco Bell store acquisition and guidance for the year. During the third quarter, we grew system sales 5% with 3% unit growth and 3% same-store sales growth. Digital sales are growing quickly across our markets with Yum! reaching $10 billion in digital sales and digital mix of approximately 60%. On restaurant level margins, Taco Bell U.S. delivered 23.9% margins, 50 basis points higher year-over-year despite a 1 percentage point headwind from double-digit beef inflation. Taco Bell's restaurant margins benefited from strong top line growth fueled by, among many factors, the expansion of Taco Bell's category entry points like Crispy Chicken and Refrescas. Beef inflation will remain a headwind through year-end, though we take some comfort in beef prices declining 10% since exiting the third quarter. For KFC, the team delivered 13.7% restaurant-level margins, 120 basis points higher year-over-year, driven by significant improvements in both KFC U.K. and KFC U.S. margins. Moving on to expenses. Ex special G&A was $268 million, up 7% year-over-year as we lapped lower incentive compensation accruals in the third quarter of last year. Reported G&A of $282 million included $14 million of special expenses. And finally, third quarter core operating profit grew 7%, leading to ex special EPS of $1.58, up 15% year-over-year. Moving to development. we opened 1,131 gross new units globally, a Q3 record with KFC opening 760 units or a store every 3 hours. KFC's momentum remained broad-based and energized by strong franchise engagement. China, India, Thailand, South Korea and Mexico led the way, each demonstrating the strength of our playbook and the scalability of our brand. Overall, KFC's development pipeline remains robust. White space remains abundant and our well-capitalized, capable and committed franchise partners remain growth hungry. At Taco Bell, development accelerated this quarter with 74 gross unit openings, well above Q3 levels of last year. Taco Bell International continued to build momentum, adding 27 gross new units and successfully launching 2 new markets, Greece and Ireland. On the back of accelerating sales, we remain on track to deliver 100 international net new units this year, reflecting energized franchise partners, compelling brand marketing and improving unit level economics around the world. Early development plans for next year offer promising signs of further unit growth. At Pizza Hut, we built 289 gross units this quarter. We delivered gross builds across 31 countries with strength in China, the U.S. and India. We've been pleased with Pizza Hut's gross unit openings as the brand is a leader in new builds within the pizza category globally in all but 1 quarter over the last 4 years. However, gross builds have been partially offset by elevated closures through Q3, largely isolated to a reduction in footprint in a small number of markets, including Turkey. These closures were largely tied to specific franchisee matters impacting operational execution. Turning to technology. As we continue to work on making our restaurants more connected to drive growth and operational excellence across the Yum! system, Jim Dausch, our new Chief Digital and Technology Officer, will help accelerate the next phase of our transformation, but our focus remains the same, building the industry's leading restaurant technology platform that enhances guest experience, simplifies operations and strengthens franchisee economics built around easy experiences, easy operations and easy insights. I'll provide a brief update on the progress across these 3 pillars. Within easy experiences, we're creating more frictionless, engaging consumer journeys across our brands. At KFC, global digital sales mix reached 63%, supported by kiosk adoption and aggregator partnerships. Byte Commerce, our scalable and global web and mobile app ordering platform, continued to unlock the creativity of our digital marketing teams by enabling viral promotions or daily drops that drive high transaction velocity, such as Pizza Hut's $2 Personal Pan, Tuesday offer this quarter. Byte Commerce expanded to Pizza Hut Canada, Kuwait and France this quarter, building on earlier launches in Pizza Hut U.K., Mexico and Peru. Finally, Byte Connect, a product that streamlines order and menu integration with third-party delivery partners has expanded to KFC U.S., Taco Bell U.S. will add this service next year. Under easy operations, we are simplifying restaurant operations and giving teams better tools to deliver fast, accurate and friendly service. Byte Coach, which delivers AI recommendations to our store managers, was deployed to an additional 4,000 KFC restaurants internationally this quarter, bringing the total to more than 28,000 restaurants across the Yum! system. Beginning next year, we'll add further AI capabilities to Byte Coach to provide restaurant general managers individualized guidance to help improve store-level performance based on inputs from a combination of operations, consumer feedback and store audit data. Within easy insights, our data and analytics capabilities are providing better visibility and faster, more actionable insights across brands. In addition to building more AI capabilities into the Byte ecosystem for our franchisees, consumers and restaurant general managers, we are also excited about using AI at the enterprise level to build Byte in a more efficient manner. Currently, 1/3 of our developers are regularly using AI developer tools and realizing significant productivity gains. By early 2026, substantially all of our Byte software developers will be using AI tools to write better, safer and more efficient code for the Byte platform. Next, I'll provide an update on our balance sheet and liquidity position. Our capital priorities remain unchanged: maximize shareholder value through strategic investments in our business, maintain a strong and flexible balance sheet, offer a competitive dividend and return excess cash to shareholders. Net capital expenditures for the quarter totaled $73 million, reflecting $21 million in refranchising proceeds and $94 million in gross capital expenditures. We expect our net leverage ratio to end the year at approximately 4x, consistent with our commitment to hold leverage at approximately 4x. As announced in September, we completed successfully a $1.5 billion issuance of Taco Bell senior secured notes with a weighted average coupon of just under 5%. Proceeds were used to repay 2026 debt maturities and to prefund our Taco Bell acquisition. During the quarter, we repurchased approximately 244,000 shares for a total of $36 million, bringing our year-to-date repurchases to $372 million. As Chris shared, similar to the successful KFC U.K. acquisition last year, we saw an exciting opportunity to invest in the business and acquire 128 Taco Bell U.S. stores in the fourth quarter. The total cash outlay is expected to be approximately $670 million, largely financed with cash on hand. In 2026, we expect the stores we're acquiring to contribute approximately $70 million in incremental EBITDA and add 1 point to Yum!'s operating profit growth after the impact of depreciation and amortization, including reacquired franchise rights. Due to timing and modest transition costs, we don't expect this deal to contribute to core operating profit in 2025. Additionally, the Taco Bell team can step up U.S. equity development in this market beginning in 2027. Over the long term, we anticipate profit growth for this estate to exceed Yum!'s long-term growth algorithm. As Chris mentioned, while retaining our asset-light strategy, we are investing where we see outsized strategic benefits and financial returns. Now let me share our latest outlook for the balance of the year. As you heard from Chris, both KFC and Taco Bell are taking share from our competition. We expect KFC to achieve record gross unit openings on a full year basis and Taco Bell to deliver strong international development. At Taco Bell U.S., despite the impact of beef inflation, we expect our full year restaurant level margins to fall within our guidance at 24%, with global reported margins landing slightly below the U.S. level. We expect Q4 ex special G&A to grow by a mid-single-digit percentage rate year-over-year, finishing the year in line with our full year guidance. To summarize, KFC and Taco Bell, which make up roughly 90% of our divisional operating profit, continue to perform exceptionally well with sales momentum that has continued into Q4. Together, we expect these brands to be on track or ahead of our original full year plan for unit growth, sales growth and core operating profit growth. This performance is further backed by a strong execution of Byte and disciplined G&A management across the enterprise. Below the line, we expect full year interest expense to land in the range of $505 million to $515 million, incorporating the impact of our recent debt issuance. Lastly, at current rates, we expect FX to represent approximately a $15 million tailwind to reported operating profit in Q4. Finally, turning to our Pizza Hut division. We remain focused on strengthening business performance. That said, as we prepare the business for a potential transaction, our Q4 results may see some impact from actions involving isolated franchisee situations. Taking this and Pizza Hut's year-to-date performance into account, full year 2025 Yum! performance may land slightly below our algorithm. We will record expenses tied to the strategic options review as a special item. Since this is an active process, we will not be providing further comments on the status of our review. In closing, we remain focused on continuing to deliver relevant value, distinctive innovation and rapid digital transformation, the combination that keeps us resilient regardless of macro conditions. We are confident in the strength of our strategies, the agility of our franchisees and the power of our business model to drive sustainable growth over the long term. With that, operator, we are ready to take questions.