Thanks, Ben. Good morning, everyone. On Slide 3, you can see a summary of our first quarter financial results. Organic net sales grew 10%, and constant currency adjusted EBITDA increased 21% year-over-year. Last quarter, we noted the timing of metal hedges related to tin and silver in our Assembly Solutions business, which negatively impacted Q4 2025 performance by several million dollars. In Q1 2026, we largely recovered that amount through sales of finished goods and higher metals values. Underlying year-on-year growth in adjusted EBITDA would have been in the mid-teens when excluding this benefit as well as the impact of acquisitions and prior period divestitures. Our results in Q1 include a full quarter of EFC and 2 months of Micromax ownership. Assuming we had owned Micromax for the full quarter, adjusted EBITDA would have been $170 million. Electronics organic net sales growth of 15% was broad based. Each of the segment's verticals grew organically by double digits. Our Specialties business grew 1% organically, driven by strong performance in the offshore energy vertical. Global industrial weakness continued this quarter as our Industrial Solutions business was flat year-over-year on the top line. Beginning this quarter, we are updating our definition of adjusted EBITDA margin to remove the value of pass-through metals sold in the period. We believe this change allows for a better perspective on the underlying value we are providing to customers, eliminates the noise for metal prices, volatility and margins over time and enhances period-to-period margin comparability. Pass-through metals revenue was $256 million in the first quarter of 2026 and $101 million in the fourth quarter of 2025. On this new basis, adjusted EBITDA margin improved 170 bps year-over-year to 27.8% this quarter. This improvement was primarily driven by mix with organic growth in higher-value product lines and partially offset by continued OpEx investment to support growth initiatives. Adjusted EPS grew 21% in the first quarter, largely reflecting the underlying demand improvement in our Electronics business and offset by higher interest costs associated with our recent acquisition activities. On Slide 4, we share additional detail on the drivers of organic net sales growth in our 2 segments. In Electronics, 15% organic growth was the strongest we have seen in this segment since early 2021 during the COVID recovery. We are benefiting from rising demand for products that address new challenges around power delivery, circuit density, thermal management and reliability in high-value applications. As a result, our Assembly Solutions business grew 12% organically with a sustained increase in the sales of high reliability alloys and engineered starter preforms to data center suppliers. At the same time, in the Consumer Electronics market, pace used for higher and smartphones continued to grow in the first quarter. Circuitry Solutions net sales improved 17% organically, with growth continuing to come from the high layer count server board market, where our differentiated solutions have great traction. We generated record quarterly sales in these product categories tied to high-performance computing and AI server builds. Beyond the data center market, sales were further supported by strong demand from suppliers of high-end smartphone components. Finally, our business is also benefiting from continued manufacturing investments in Southeast Asia, where we have a strong and growing presence. Semiconductor Solutions organic net sales grew 18% due in part to improved order patterns for power electronics products at legacy customers and growing momentum in the thermal interface products for high power consumption applications such as AI GPU and CPUs. We also experienced strong and growing demand for advanced packaging solutions. Revenue growth for these products was magnified in the quarter by the large increases in precious metal prices that are input to many of these solutions. Micromax, which we own for 2 months of this quarter is not included in our organic net sales growth calculation, but contributed roughly $65 million to reported sales in the quarter. We expect metal prices fluctuations to create volatility in headline sales for this business as roughly 2/3 of reported revenue is related to metals. Turning to our Specialty segment. Industrial Solutions was essentially flat in the quarter as demand for surface treatment chemistry was impacted by softer Americas automotive production activity, particularly with customers operating in Mexico. European automotive customers saw relatively stronger growth in the period against an easier 2025 comp. We remain cautious about our European industrial demand outlook. Our Offshore Energy Solutions business grew 15% organically as a result of strong volume growth and pricing. This quarter also benefited from favorable comparisons to the prior year period, which was unusually soft due to a few specific customer delays. Finally, EFC gases and Advanced Materials contributed $19 million of revenue in the first quarter. This was a record first quarter for this business, which is typically the slowest of the year for EFC, primarily on the back of strong demand from electrical infrastructure customers. The EFC team is executing at a high level. growing wallet share with existing semiconductor and space customers and winning new qualifications in both. We expect a strong run for EFC this year and into the future. Slide 5 addresses cash flow and the balance sheet. When our business grows, we typically need to invest in working capital. And higher metals prices compounded our working capital investment in the quarter. As a result, free cash flow was negative. The first quarter is always our slowest from a cash flow standpoint and the high level of growth in the quarter magnified this impact. We expect strong cash flow generation in subsequent quarters this year, assuming metals prices stabilize. CapEx in the quarter was $25 million, which is trending above our previously guided annual run rate of $75 million. I do recommend, there are excellent opportunities in front of us to invest in growth CapEx to support large, profitable commercial wins. We are taking the initiative to build incumbency and leadership in these areas. We are also continuing to invest in footprint consolidation and other efficiency projects where we see compelling returns. As a result, we now expect to invest between $75 million and $100 million in CapEx this year, which remains less than 3% of sales. Our expectation for other uses of cash unchanged for interest and modestly lower for taxes. Turning to the balance sheet. Our net leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was 3.4x and it would have been 3.1x assuming we had owned both Micromax and EFC for the full trailing 12-month period. We anticipate reducing leverage by approximately half a turn by the end of the year, assuming no further capital deployment. This strong balance sheet position should once again give us flexibility to act on opportunities if and when they arise. With that, I will turn the call back to Ben. Ben?