Thank you, Scott. Turning to Slide 12. Third quarter net interest revenue was $301 million, a $21 million decrease linked quarter. Net interest margin was 2.69%, a 31 basis point decrease versus Q2. I will note that 8 basis points of the 31 basis point margin decline was due to growth in the trading securities. As the trading securities grow is dilutive to the net interest margin as it grows earning assets at a narrower spread compared to the rest of the balance sheet. Net of the 8 basis point impact from trading, the remaining 23 basis point decline was driven by the competitive deposit environment as average interest-bearing deposit costs increased by 61 basis points linked quarter. Our cumulative interest-bearing deposit beta increased to 58% for the third quarter and non-interest DDA continued to shift into interest bearing. DDA as a percent of total deposits was 29.6% as of September 30. This slide shows net interest margin and net interest revenue with and without the impact of the trading business to better highlight trends and comparability. For the third quarter of 2023, the net interest margin, excluding the impact of trading assets, was 3.14% versus 3.36% in the second quarter. Growth in earning assets during the quarter was driven by trading securities and loans, partially offset by a decline in our fair value option securities used to hedge our mortgage servicing asset. Turning to Slide 13. Liquidity and capital continue to be very strong on an absolute basis and versus peers. Total deposits grew $358 million on a period-end basis and the loan-to-deposit ratio was 70.5%, up slightly from the previous quarter. Average total deposits increased $918 million linked quarter with average interest-bearing deposits up $1.8 billion, partially offset by an $840 million decline in demand deposits. Brokered CDs have recently been a topic for our industry, and we know that our usage of that funding source over time is generally low, but not zero. Brokered CDs were $688 million or less than 2% of total funding at quarter end and declined $72 million versus the prior quarter end. Our tangible common equity ratio was 7.74%, down 5 basis points linked quarter due to balance sheet growth and increase in interest rates put up 11 basis points from year end 2022. Adjusted TCE, including the impact of unrealized losses on held to maturity securities is 7.35%, consistent with year-end [indiscernible]. CET1 is 12.1% and if adjusted for AOCI, would be 9.7%. As the recent regulatory capital proposal is largely focused on banks over $100 million, we have ample capital to support continued organic growth while at the same time allowing for continued share buyback. During the third quarter, we repurchased 700,500 shares at an average price of $84.17 per share. Turning to Slide 14. Linked quarter total expenses increased by $5.6 million or 1.8%. Personnel expense was flat linked quarter as increases related to our San Antonio and Memphis expansions were mostly offset by a decrease in employee benefits. Non-personnel operating expense grew $5.5 million, occupancy and equipment increased $2.5 million, driven by the retirement of certain ATMs as we upgrade our network. FDIC insurance expense increased $1 million. Combined, all other expense categories increased $3.3 million, much of that related to an accrual for certain disputed matters. Year-over-year total operating expense increased $3 million or 10%. Personnel expense increased $20 million or 12%. However, $3 million of the year-over-year increase was related to a onetime benefit during the second quarter of '22 from the dissolution of our pension plan, combined with linked quarter market adjustments for deferred compensation. Third quarter 2023 also includes $2.6 million of expansion related personnel costs. Cash based compensation related to new business production increased $6.8 million. The remaining $8 million year-over-year increase was primarily regular salaries and benefits with that directly related to annual merit increases and a much lower level of open position. Year-over-year, other operating expense increased $9 million or 7.3%. Occupancy and equipment increased $3.3 million with $2.5 million related to the ATM retirements, FDIC insurance increased $3.7 million as both the assessment base and the rate increase, and data processing increased $3.9 million, primarily due to continued investments in technology. These were partially offset by a $1.1 million decrease in mortgage banking costs as MSR amortization flow. Turning to Slide 15. I will note that we are in the middle of our 2024 financial planning process, so we are not ready to provide forward-looking assumptions with the same level of detail as we have for the last few quarters. However, I will provide the following higher level expectations for the next 15 months. We continue to expect upper single-digit annualized loan growth. Economic conditions in our geographic footprint remain favorable and continue to be supported by business and migration from other markets. The competitive environment for loans should be a tailwind for us. We expect to continue holding our available-for-sale securities portfolio flat and to maintain a neutral interest rate risk position. We expect total deposits to be stable or grow modestly and the loan-to-deposit ratio to remain in the low 70s. Currently, we are assuming no additional rate changes by the Federal Reserve in 2023 or 2024. We believe the margin will migrate modestly lower over the next couple of quarters as interest-bearing deposit betas level out and demand deposit balance attrition runs its course. In aggregate, we expect total fees and commissions revenue to grow at a mid-single digit growth rate on a year-over-year basis and our strategic expansion initiatives to positively impact growth rates for 2024. We expect expenses to increase modestly as we continue to invest in strategic growth and technology initiatives with revenue growth following at a slight lag. We expect the efficiency ratio to increase with net interest margin changes, then migrate downward as revenue growth is realized. This does not include the impact of the FDIC special assessment, which could be finalized in the fourth quarter of 2023. Our combined allowance level is above the median of our peers, and we expect to maintain a strong credit reserve. Given our expectations for loan growth and the strength of our credit quality, we expect quarterly provision expense near recent levels to continue, and an eventual move towards normal credit costs later in 2024. Changes in the economic outlook will affect our provision expense. Additionally, we expect to continue our opportunistic share repurchase activity. I'll now turn the call back over to Stacy Kymes for closing commentary.