Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. We delivered a strong first quarter with organic volumes up 3% year-over-year, resulting in our third consecutive quarter of adjusted EBITDA growth. Our performance was driven by new business wins in all regions, highlighted by double-digit organic volume growth in Asia Pacific, where we continue to gain traction across the region. Adjusted EBITDA increased 5% compared to the prior year, building on net share gains that enabled us to outperform our end markets, which we estimate were down approximately 1% in the quarter. Gross margins improved from the fourth quarter, increasing 150 basis points sequentially and 40 basis points year-over-year. The sequential improvement in margins was bolstered by higher utilization of fixed assets and improved operational performance. Market conditions remain soft overall, with pockets of incremental industrial gains tempered by weak automotive production. The hostilities in the straight of our moves are creating inflationary pressure on raw materials and input costs. But so far, it has not had a significant direct or indirect impact on demand. Strong commercial execution from our team and contributions from our recent acquisitions helped offset the underlying sluggish markets, enabling us to deliver organic volume, revenue and EBITDA growth in the quarter despite headwinds and volatility. Turning to the first quarter results. Net sales increased 8% year-over-year, fueled by net share gains of 4% at the top of our target range, along with the contribution from recent acquisitions. This marks the 10th consecutive quarter of net share gains, while our end markets have been consistently sluggish. Organic sales volumes in Asia Pacific grew for the 11th consecutive quarter. While our business in China continues to grow above end market rates, we are also achieving outsized growth in emerging markets such as India, Thailand and Vietnam. Operating margins have expanded in the region as we are benefiting from recent organic investments in localized manufacturing. In EMEA, organic volumes grew 2% in the first quarter as new business wins outpaced persistently tough end markets. Volumes in the Americas declined slightly year-over-year, driven by a lingering customer outage, tariff uncertainty and weather-related disruptions. Despite these challenges, March had the highest volume in the Americas in the last 16 months, signaling improved momentum as we exited the quarter. EBITDA margins declined 50 basis points year-over-year, primarily because of higher SG&A expenditures related to acquisitions, foreign currency and incentive compensation. I would like to provide more color on the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and how we are managing its impact on our business. Immediately after the conflict began, we established an executive level task force to monitor developments, assess potential impacts and coordinate our response. Our top priority was to ensure the safety of our more than 4,700 employees, particularly those living and working in the region. We also took swift action to confirm supply continuity to customers in the affected region. Since then, the task force has remained actively engaged, tracking conditions closely and addressing emerging pressures. From a business perspective, we have proportionately low direct sales exposure to Middle East countries near the conflict area. Our sales to North Africa and the Middle East in 2025 were less than 2% of total company net sales. While first quarter results were largely insulated, we expect higher raw material and shipping costs in the second quarter. To address this, we implemented pricing actions across all regions with some taking effect in April. There will be a typical lag between rising costs and price realization, which we expect will create temporary gross margin pressures in the second quarter. Based on the actions we have taken and additional increases planned for this quarter, we expect to recover margins within 1 to 2 quarters. Meanwhile, we are committed to ensuring products reach our customers without disruption. We have not yet seen a meaningful impact on customer demand, but a prolonged conflict could begin to influence broader economic activity, including forward demand and further cost inflation. With this backdrop, we are focused on what we can control. Today, we are announcing the launch of a new transformation program that will reduce cost and complexity across the organization, optimize our manufacturing network, strengthen sales and technical capabilities and simplify global processes. We will pace investments over the coming months to unlock productivity in a disciplined manner. The first phase is underway through a comprehensive business process review focused on finding cost opportunities and improving master data management. The program will fundamentally change the way we work, and we are looking to modernize the employee and customer experience. In the first quarter, we took steps to streamline our executive leadership structure to sharpen customer focus and accelerate decision-making. This program is central to achieving adjusted EBITDA margins at or above our target of 18%. We expect to exit this year with approximately $10 million in new run rate savings. Over the next 3 years, we see a clear path to delivering at least $20 million to $30 million of sustainable structural cost improvement with much of that target already identified. We have a clear line of sight to a robust set of initiatives, giving us confidence in our long-term transformation path. This new program complements actions that are already underway. The closure of our manufacturing facility in Dortmund, Germany remains on track, and we are beginning to realize the associated financial benefits. We continue to expect approximately $2 million in cost savings from the closure in 2026 and $5 million in annual run rate savings beginning in 2027. We also recently announced the planned closure of our manufacturing facility in Songjiang, China, which will coincide with the start-up of our new facility in Zhongjuang later this summer. Production from Songjiang will transition to the new site as it comes online, enabling more efficient operations and enhanced capabilities. This modern facility will strengthen our ability to serve customers across Asia Pacific and manufacture recent portfolio additions more competitively at the local level. Turning to the outlook. Our view on macro trends is consistent with prior expectations. End markets declined modestly in the first quarter as expected. And while we still continue to predict flat end market conditions for the full year with normal seasonal improvement and a slightly better demand environment in the second half, we expect sequential volume and revenue growth in Q2, driven by seasonal improvement and wrap effect of new and recent business wins. Visibility through the first part of the quarter indicates steady demand. At the same time, we anticipate temporary gross margin pressure related to higher input costs stemming from the Middle East conflict, which is expected to push gross margins below our target range in the second quarter. The situation remains dynamic due to the prevailing market uncertainty. We expect these gross margin headwinds to be temporary, lasting no more than 1 to 2 quarters. Our current estimate is that second quarter gross margins will be 200 to 300 basis points below quarter 1 on a sequential basis. Through pricing actions we are taking, we expect to fully recover gross margins within our target range of 36% to 37% as we exit the year. With the rapid raw material cost escalation in recent weeks above what we experienced at the end of the first quarter and the ongoing uncertainty of the situation, we are in the process of implementing further price increases, which we expect will be in place before the end of the second quarter. We are recovering the cost impact from inflation in a responsible way and collaborating with our customers to successfully navigate the complexity of the current situation. As mentioned previously, the company is also taking action to improve our cost structure. Our long-term earnings profile continues to be resilient. Our local-for-local operating model and deep customer relationships differentiate us and enable new business wins. As a result, even amid heightened uncertainty, we continue to expect revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth in 2026, assuming no significant further deterioration in our end markets because of the Middle East conflict. In closing, I am incredibly proud of our team and their consistent execution in a challenging environment. We are making substantial progress across key priorities, including pursuit of new business, cost structure optimization, while also diligently executing our strategy to create long-term value for our customers and shareholders. With that, I will turn the call over to Tom to walk through the financials in more detail.