Great. Thank you, Palmer. As you mentioned, for the second quarter, we're reporting net income of $90.8 million or $1.32 per diluted share. During the quarter, we recorded a $12.6 million gain on the conversion of our Visa Class B shares. And then we also strategically sold a portion of our MSR portfolio for a $4.7 million gain. We used some of that capital to restructure our BOLI investments. The BOLI transaction will more than offset the loss revenue from the MSR sale and we have the ability to regenerate additional MSR revenue going forward. These also reduced our asset sensitivity in a down environment. Excluding these items, our adjusted net income was $80.8 million or $1.17 per diluted share. Our adjusted return on assets improved to 1.25% and our adjusted return on tangible common equity improved to 13.35%. We remain focused on growing shareholder value. As Palmer mentioned, we ended the quarter with tangible book value of 35.79, which was an increase of $1.27 or 14.8% annualized this quarter. We repurchased approximately $3 million of common stock during the quarter at an average price of $47.12 and we have approximately $91.7 million remaining through the end of October. On the revenue side, our interest income for the quarter increased $17.9 million, and our interest expense only increased $7.3 million. So that allowed our net interest income to increase by $10.5 million. Included in interest income this quarter was $2.3 million of bond income related to the accelerated accretion on early payoffs and then also some positive inflation adjustments on some tips bonds [ph] We were really pleased with our margin this quarter. It expanded 7 basis points to 3.58% from 3.51% last quarter, but our margin for the quarter, excluding the 4 basis point lift from those onetime bond income would have been 3.54, which is right in line with our previous guidance of 2 to 3 basis points of expansion. A few more quick details on the 7-point change. The onetime bond income was 4 basis points positive. Our asset sensitivity and asset mix changes were 8 basis points positive. And then those were offset by 4 basis points of beta catch-up and 1 basis points of deposit mix change. During the second quarter, we recorded a $19 million provision for credit losses, bringing our coverage ratio up to 160 of loans and 330% of portfolio NPLs. And while I'm on credit, let me just mention real quick our NPA ratio at just 39 basis points, excluding the Ginnie Mae and our charge-offs improved to just 18 basis points compared to 25 basis points last quarter. Adjusted noninterest income increased $6.3 million, mostly in the mortgage division due to the increase in production. Our total adjusted noninterest expense increased $10.5 million, split evenly between the banking unit and the lines of business. The increases were mostly related to variable comp from increased production, less deferred costs in our Equipment Finance division, some strategic marketing expenses for a new deposit campaign and increases in fraud losses. Our efficiency ratio was 51.68% for the quarter, and our adjusted efficiency ratio was 55%. We expect the adjusted efficiency ratio to moderate back downward for the remainder of the year. On the balance sheet side, we ended the quarter with total assets of $26.5 billion compared with $25.2 billion at the end of the year, and total earning assets increased $865 million to end at $24.4 billion. We have approximately $310 million of bonds maturing in the third quarter, and we prefunded roughly half of those maturities this quarter. The new bonds came in at about 115 basis points higher than the soon to be maturing bonds. Loans held for sale increased about $206 million due to the summer seasonality. Portfolio loans increased $392.3 million or 7.7% annualized and deposits increased $446.8 million or 8.6% annualized. Our noninterest-bearing deposits still represent a healthy 31% of total deposits, and our brokered CDs actually declined $5.2 million this quarter. We continue to anticipate 2024 loan and deposit growth in the mid-single digits, and we expect the deposit growth will continue to be the governor on loan growth. And with that, I'll wrap it up and turn the call back over to Alan for any questions from the group.