Thanks, Priscilla. The big theme we've been communicating this morning is growth. As Priscilla noted, we have taken the right steps to position the bank for responsible expansion and 2026 guidance outlined some of our plans. But this quarter also marks a milestone as 2025 concludes the fifth fiscal year since Priscilla joined the bank, and it's worth briefly reflecting on that progress. Slide three illustrates Amalgamated's remarkable growth across multiple metrics during this era. And beyond the numbers, the strategy guiding this progress is clear. Profitability is a North Star inextricably tied with mission purpose, a capital base to match the size of the balance sheet, the balance sheet as a source of strength and asset quality consistent with well-run peers. And when we got started four and a half years ago, our first priority was to rebuild trust. Today, we can confidently say we did what we set out to do. We now look forward to driving the next phase of Amalgamated's growth building on this solid foundation. Before we get to guidance, let's review the quarter. In addition to the markers Priscilla mentioned, here are some other key highlights. Net income is $26.6 million or $0.88 per diluted share and core net income the non-GAAP measure, $30 million or 99¢ per diluted share. The spread between GAAP and core earnings per share was almost entirely related to a $41.9 million sale of performing residential loans with sub 3% coupons that resulted in a $3.8 million pretax loss. GAAP and core earnings were bolstered by the recognition of a $1.5 million tax credit, which I'll talk about more in a moment. Excluding that benefit, core net income would have been a solid $27.5 million or 91¢ per diluted share, on par with the prior quarter. Our net interest income grew by 1% to $77.9 million which exceeded the high end of our guidance range. Additionally, our net interest margin increased six basis points to 3.66% driven by a 16 basis point decline in our cost of funds as we benefited from the Fed's recent rate cuts. Core noninterest income was solid at $10.1 million continuing its steady improvement over the past four quarters. Driven primarily by trust income and banking fees. It now represents 11.4% of core revenue, reflecting meaningful progress towards our 85/15 revenue diversification objective. Expenses ticked up a bit during the quarter, largely related to non-core severance costs in our residential lending unit, core expense of $44.9 million was right in line with our annual target of $170 million. We are very happy with our core efficiency ratio of 51.13%, And as expenses have risen as expected, revenue growth has kept pace and sets us up well for 2026. Overall, it's another solid quarter with continued strength across our key performance metrics. Most notably, tangible book value per share rose 87¢ or 3.4%, and tier one leverage was strong at 9.36%. We returned capital to shareholders through buybacks of $8.7 million and our $0.14 quarterly dividend, And earlier this week, we announced a $0.03 dividend increase to $0.17 based on our confident outlook for 2026 earnings. Now just a quick note on the tax credit I mentioned earlier. This quarter's credit reflects a new tax planning approach that runs credits through the tax provision instead of noninterest income. And because of this change, past tax credit recognition will no longer be classified as noncore credits recognized under this new approach will be considered core. We've added a slide on page seven to explain the change, and we'll keep it in for a bit to help clarify any tax line volatility as we build our inventory of credits. The key point we're reducing noncore adjustments to make our financials simpler to understand. Asset quality metrics remained solid overall, but there were some credit turbulence during the quarter. We marked for sale the non-accrual multifamily asset identified in Q3, which contributed to an elevated charge-off ratio and added approximately $800,000 to provision expense. In our DC market, one borrower showed stress related to the rapid rehousing program restructuring resulting in increased reserves of $1.9 million and a related $7.5 million increase in nonaccrual multifamily loans. This also was the source of the entire increase in multifamily criticized or classified assets during the quarter. We are currently working with this borrower to restructure portions of their portfolio, and we believe we are adequately reserved this time on the nonaccruing loans. The other loans with this bar that moved into classified and criticized the quarter benefit from additional equity partners to support ongoing rightsizing activities. And while this development is unfortunate, our total exposure to DC's rehousing program beyond this relationship is low, with all loans graded past as of the quarter end. Now let's move to full year 2025 performance. We've updated our targets to actual results for easier comparison, In what began as a very challenging year, we exceeded all our key performance goals and maintained consistent upward momentum, issuing two guidance increases during the year and ultimately exceeding those projections. Looking ahead to 2026, I'll wrap up my comments where Priscilla started. Talking about growth. We believe our business model will deliver reliable growth across multiple dimensions. With our full year 2026 guidance, we aim to hit the following revenue and profitability ranges: Net interest income of $327 million to $331 million or roughly 10% to 11% growth, and core pretax pre-provision earnings of $180 million to $183 million or nine to 10% growth. For performance targets, we aim to deliver core return on average assets growth to 1.35% core return on tangible common equity growth to 15%, and balance sheet growth of approximately 5%. And for expense discipline targets, we aim to deliver return to core positive operating leverage of between 34%. Growth in technology spend of about 18% to continue to scale the business and annual core OpEx growth to $188 million. Underpinning these targets is quarterly net loan growth of one and a half to 2%. That builds on the momentum we established in the 2020 and considers the effect of our runoff portfolios. This guidance reflects our commitment to disciplined execution and value creation, We enter 2026 with clarity, confidence, and intent to deliver quality returns on tangible common equity consistently. Closing with Alens in the 2026 based on its target average balance sheet size at approximately $8.7 billion. We estimate net interest income to increase to between $79 million and $81 million and we also expect our net interest margin to rise from the fourth quarter primarily from increased yields from the loan growth that came on late in the quarter. We're now happy to take your questions. So operator, please open up the line for Q&A.