Thanks, Joe. Turning to Slide 10, the highlight of the third quarter for us was the improved deposit mix, including $93 million of core deposit growth or 14.4% annualized, an another quarter of non-interest-bearing deposit growth. Looking at the chart in the bottom left, core deposit balances have steadily trended higher since the first quarter of 2023, including 6.9% annualized growth year-to-date in 2024. This chart highlights the non-linear nature of our core deposit growth that we always talk about. We will have some quarters with bigger inflows or outflows, but the momentum is there as we continue to see growth over time. Given this core deposit growth and the elevated loan payoffs we have seen recently, we were able to call some higher-cost brokered deposits and let some time deposits run off. In total, brokered and time deposits declined by $158 million in the third quarter. Because we reduced our exposure to some of these higher-cost deposits, total deposits declined for the quarter, but the overall mix improved. As Joe mentioned, we would expect these deposit mix changes, along with the $1.4 billion of funding we have tied to short-term rates, to help lower our deposit costs going forward. Turning to Slide 11, loan balances were down $115 million in the third quarter due to elevated loan payoffs. We mentioned on last quarter’s call that we were seeing increased payoffs carryover from the second quarter into early July. This continued throughout the third quarter, resulting in $163 million of payoffs, up over $100 million from the first quarter. On a year-to-date basis, payoffs were up 42% compared to 2023. We are likely in a catch-up period as payoffs were well below average throughout much of 2023 and early 2024. While loan balances declined in the quarter, we were able to lower our loan-to-deposit ratio to 98.3% from 99.8% last quarter. Slide 12 provides more detail on payoff and origination activity. While the increased payoffs impacted our overall loan growth, they show there is continued liquidity in our lending spaces as clients are able to refinance or sell their properties. We can redeploy this liquidity into higher-yielding loans and generate additional loan fees, which support net interest income. New originations declined as the higher interest rate environment early in the quarter and the challenged equity market continued to cause some borrowers to delay projects, while other deals just didn’t pencil out. Competition has also increased, especially from agencies, that resulted in tighter pricing than we were willing to offer. However, loan demand remains strong and we continue to get in front of good deals. Borrowers have shown a renewed interest in starting projects following the Fed cut in September. Our current loan pipeline is the strongest it has been all year. We started seeing the pipeline build off low levels late in 2023 and early 2024 and then dipped in the second quarter, likely affecting originations in the third quarter. But the pipeline has rebounded nicely as we head into the fourth quarter. Keep in mind that it does take time for loans in the pipeline to translate into loan growth on the balance sheet. In addition, we have been actively generating new loan commitments, some of which won’t fund right away, but will provide balance sheet growth in future quarters. Looking ahead to the fourth quarter, loan payoffs are likely to remain elevated. As a result, we expect loan balances to remain relatively flat, excluding the acquisition. Overall, we are focused on generating profitable growth with strong borrowers while adhering to our conservative credit culture. We aren’t going to compromise on pricing or structure or expand our credit box just to drive near-term loan growth. If loan growth is a bit slower, we are happy to optimize our funding mix and build liquidity that we can deploy into the right deals at the right time. We can also supplement loan growth with other earning assets, such as securities that yield around 5%. In addition, we are preparing to onboard First Minnetonka City Bank’s loan portfolio and deposit base, which will provide growth and liquidity, positioning us well heading into 2025. Slide 13 highlights the repricing of our loan portfolio, which we expect to benefit in rates-down environments. This is driven by our large fixed-rate portfolio, which makes up nearly 70% of total loans and relatively small variable-rate portfolio. We have $620 million of fixed and adjustable-rate loans maturing or repricing over the next 12 months at yields below their new originations or new originations are going on the books. This means we should see our portfolio loan yields continue to reprice higher as we redeploy funds from maturing loans to new originations. While our variable-rate portfolio will reprice lower if we see future rate cuts, we have been diligent in increasing loan floors with nearly 80% now being above 5%. This provides loan yield support if interest rates continue to decline. Because of our ability to continue repricing loans higher in a lower rate environment, loan growth isn’t the only lever we have to pull to support net interest income growth. I’ll now turn it over to Jeff.