Thank you, Larry, and hello, everyone. Our marketplace delivered another quarter of strong growth, further reinforcing its expanding relevance and increasing scale. GMV rose 17% year-over-year on a trailing 12-month basis ended March 31, 2026, to $1.7 billion, reflecting both higher transaction activity and expanding buyer engagement. Our marketplace ecosystem continues to strengthen with active third-party sellers growing 19% to 1,377, broadening product assortment for our buyers, while active buyers increased 25% to 12,473, reinforcing the platform's value proposition. These results reflect a healthy, well-balanced marketplace with strong momentum. Our open-ended ecosystem and tech-enabled supply chain drive efficiency and help manage risk, especially in uncertain conditions. We remain focused on execution, operating lean, moving quickly and maintaining discipline to support long-term growth. Although the U.S. market remains highly volatile due to the industry-wide headwinds and ongoing policy uncertainty, we delivered 12% U.S. marketplace GMV growth on a quarterly basis. This performance was not driven by sector growth. It came from continued market share gains enabled by our SFR trading model and disciplined execution. Moving beyond the U.S., Europe continues to emerge as a powerful growth vector and a clear example of our scalable execution-driven model. Overall, marketplace GMV in Europe grew 83% on a quarterly basis, driven by the same disciplined approach we successfully applied domestically here in the U.S. As we've shared before, our playbook for new markets remains consistent, lead with 1P to establish the market and attract buyers, then layer in 3P by leveraging buyer demand, creating scale efficiencies and reinforcing the value inherent in our strategy. Europe is still early in that journey with volume today primarily driven by 1P. However, 3P momentum is building rapidly with quarterly GMV growth of more than 500% year-over-year. That's the power of scaling a proven model. And we are complementing that organic growth with deliberate strategic initiatives, such as our recent acquisition of New Classic to deepen our reach within the industry and strengthen our presence across a broader range of channels. With New Classic, we have the opportunity to meaningfully deepen our penetration in servicing brick-and-mortar retailers, a massive segment of the furniture industry with significant runway for growth. All of this is in service of our long-term goal of building the foundational infrastructure that powers the industry wherever business happens. As Larry shared in his year-end letter to the shareholders, this vision of becoming the industry's infrastructure is exactly where we're headed. And with every move, we'll get closer. Integration of New Classic is underway and proceeding as planned. We're approaching it with the same discipline and patience that has served us well in the past because we know that getting this right matters than getting it fast. Right now, our teams are focused on the foundational work, aligning processes, integrating systems, building relationships with New Classic clients to ensure a smooth transition and developing new product assortments that are better tailored to the channels New Classic opens up for us. Consistent with our approach to previous acquisitions, we do not intend to run New Classic as a stand-alone company. Instead, we will fully integrate New Classic into our platform and manage it as a part of our broader portfolio, unlocking greater efficiency through scale and shared resources. The full value will take time to unfold, but we're confident the long-term payoff deeper market reach and more complete offering will be significant. As we've shared many times before, our focus is on profitable revenue. Unprofitable revenue is simply not our model. One of our core strengths is the ability to pivot quickly when conditions change. We don't chase revenue for the sake of revenue. So when tariffs reshaped the landscape in 2025, we moved decisively. We made an intentional decision to exit certain lower-margin product categories in the domestic market, such as steel furniture, where the economics no longer made sense. That decision put near-term pressure on U.S. revenue, but it was the right call to protect our bottom line integrity. Now with New Classic, we have a clear path to recapture and grow from there. Through New Classic's strong brick-and-mortar relationship, we expect to drive margin-accretive revenue in the U.S. market over time, reinforcing our long-term profitability while being disciplined on what we're willing to chase. That's how we grow, not just for the quarter, but for the long run. Now it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Erica for a discussion of our first quarter financials.