Good morning, and thank you for joining us for Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc.’s Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Earnings Call. I am Andrea Saba, Director of Investor Relations and Treasury. Joining me today are Alfred Marshall Rankin, Executive Chairman, and Rajiv K. Prasad, President and Chief Executive Officer. Yesterday, we filed our fourth quarter 2025 earnings release, which provides a comprehensive overview of our financial results and performance. The discussion in this script serves as a supplement to the earnings release, offering additional insights and context for our results. You can find the release and a replay of this webcast on the Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc. website. The replay will remain available for approximately 12 months. Today’s call contains forward-looking statements subject to risks that could cause actual results to differ from those expressed or implied. These risks are outlined in our earnings release and SEC filings. We will be discussing adjusted results, which we believe are useful supplements to GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of adjusted results to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are available in our earnings release and investor presentation. First, I will start with a brief overview of our fourth quarter and full year results before turning the call over to Rajiv to discuss the business environment and strategic outlook. During the fourth quarter, we saw several encouraging signs. Bookings in the fourth quarter strengthened significantly, increasing 42% sequentially and 35% year over year, which may signal the early stages of a demand recovery following an extended period of customer caution. Also, the first two months of 2026 continued this trend. Fourth quarter operating cash flow increased to $57 million, driven by meaningful improvements in inventory efficiency. We continue to make progress aligning production with demand, improving finished goods management, and reducing inventory levels, all of which support stronger cash generation. That said, market conditions remained challenging during the quarter. Fourth quarter revenues declined to $923 million, reflecting weaker shipment volumes across the business as customers continue to delay purchases until they have a clear need for new trucks. Tariffs remain a significant headwind, reducing both quarterly and full year revenue and operating profit. In the fourth quarter, the impact of tariffs, combined with lower volumes, resulted in an adjusted operating loss of $16 million. This includes $40 million in gross tariff costs. Looking at full year 2025, revenue declined to $3.8 billion and we reported full year adjusted operating profit of $16 million. This result includes approximately $100 million in gross tariff costs, underscoring the magnitude of the ongoing external pressure on our results. While 2025 reflected a difficult operating environment, our improved bookings, strong cash flow performance, and disciplined cost and inventory management position us well as demand begins to recover. With that foundation in place, I will now turn the call over to Rajiv.