Thank you, Jerry. Turning to Slide 4, the net interest margin declined just eight basis points to 232 for the third quarter. This compared to our September standalone margin of 230, which was down just three basis points from the month of June standalone margin of 233. Even more encouraging is the margin showed signs of stabilization on a month-to-month basis during the quarter. The chart in the bottom right shows the trend in monthly core margin compression, which excludes loan fees as they can be lumpy from month-to-month. After seeing several months of mid-teens margin compression in late 2022 and early 2023, we saw gradual slowing begin in the second quarter of 2023. This trend continued into the third quarter with the core margin remaining relatively stable throughout July, August, and September. This was driven by a moderation in rising funding costs as core deposits grew and borrowings declined, coupled with the continued slow but steady increase in earning asset yields. We would expect the quarterly margin to stabilize over the near-term as the compression continues to slow, keeping in mind that funding costs are and will remain under pressure given other market alternatives. As we've mentioned in the past, the margin outlook is dependent on several factors including future changes and interest rates, the shape of the yield curve, and the pace of core deposit growth. Slide 5 shows the various components of the margin. Portfolio loan yields moved higher and should continue to do so for the foreseeable future. As we look ahead, we have over $500 million of fixed and adjustable rate loans scheduled to reprice over the next year, and nearly $600 million of variable rate loans efficiently floating. Another factor here is loan fees, which have had around a 10 basis point impact on the aggregate portfolio loan yields over the past few quarters. However, this is down meaningfully from our 30 basis point run rate in mid-2022 as payoffs have declined and subsequent deferred loan origination fee realization as well. In addition to loan yields, the yield on our securities portfolio has also continued to increase, up 15 basis points from the second quarter to 439. While loan growth has been more muted, we have continued to grow the securities book with period end balances up 11% annualized during the third quarter. Keep in mind that we do not have any health and maturity securities. While rising funding costs continued to outpace earning asset yields, the rising cost of funds has slowed meaningfully. This was largely due to strong core deposit growth and a decrease in our reliance on borrowings and overnight money. In fact, our overall funding costs increased just 19 basis points in the third quarter, compared to a 50 basis point increase in the second quarter. That said, funding costs are still under pressure, and we expect to see deposit costs continue to move slowly higher, giving competition from other bank and non-bank alternatives, and the Fed's uncertain interest rate outlook. Turning to Slide 6, we have demonstrated a long track record of strong revenue and profitability. While this has been a more challenging revenue environment due in part to our spread based model, we saw signs of stabilization in the third quarter both in terms of net interest income and total revenue. Non-interest income increased in the third quarter, primarily due to $493,000 of FHLB prepayment income, similar to what we saw in the first quarter. Turning to Slide 7, expenses have remained very well controlled year-to-date. After a 6.7% decline in the first quarter and an increase of just 1.4% in the second quarter, we indicated that we would see an increased pace in the second half of the year. This was the case as non-interest expense increased 6.7% in the third quarter, the majority of which was related to incentives across the entire employee base. Historically, our non-interest expense growth has tracked closely with asset growth. On a year-to-date basis, non-interest expense in 2023 is up just 6% from 2022, below our year-over-year asset growth of 10.4%. Even with our expense discipline, our efficiency ratio has increased into the mid-50% range due to the ongoing revenue headwinds. We still maintain a highly efficient operating model relative to other banks and expect that to remain the case. Overall, we feel good about our ability to control expenses while still making key investments in the business and our people. With that, I'll turn it over to Nick.