Let me start high level. So when we were building our plan for '26, we knew it was going to be a transitional start to the year. We saw softening consumer trends in October and November. We were lapping last year's hurricane-driven demand. And we had some orders which were planned for the first quarter, which benefited the fourth quarter of fiscal '25. On the cost side, we were managing through elevated tariff pressures, which were the result of tariffs, which were levied at higher than the current rates. And in light of that, we were reshaping our network, which also created some short-term operational inefficiencies, including some absorption. These affected the results at the end of last year and we expected them to continue into the first half of '26. These were understood going in were fully embedded in our plan and the quarter thus far -- the year has thus far unfolded largely as we expected. Looking ahead, we're encouraged by the trends we're seeing in the business. Consumer demand has stabilized. We saw a strong rebound in December volumes in the U.S., which remains our largest market. We also strengthened our in-store presence with broader and higher-quality distribution across major retailers, which you'll see over the back half of the year. At the same time, we've done additional work to reposition our cost structure, and that's starting to take hold. We are starting to cycle through inventory, which were impacted by those higher rates and our mitigation efforts are starting to come to fruition. That includes relocating production capacity in the U.S., diversifying sourcing and investing in efficiencies to make the network more efficient. We've taken targeted steps to increase production, to increase the tax credits which we expect to earn this year, which should drive a benefit of roughly 50% above last year. These dynamics are all come together and setting us up for a strong acceleration of net sales and earnings in the back half. So while the first half reflects the short-term factors, the underlying trajectory is improving. This year is really about restoring growth, restoring margins and restoring free cash flow. And thus far, we're off to a great start. Specific, Lauren, to your question on battery consumption trends, we saw meaningful improvement in the quarter, as I just mentioned. December inflected the volume growth. You see in the standard trends, the 13-week volume was slightly negative. But then when you see the December data in the 4 weeks, that was where volume inflected the positive. Obviously, January is going to have a very positive volume growth with winter storms in the U.S. For the balance of the year, we expect the category to be stable and the trajectory of the category is essentially what we assume going into the year. Anything I missed?