Joseph M. Chybowski
Thank you, Jerry. Slide five highlights another quarter of strong net interest income growth, driven by annualized average earning asset growth of 16%, and one basis point of net interest margin expansion to 2.63%. As we mentioned last quarter, we were not expecting much margin expansion in the third quarter as we anticipated the higher asset yield repricing to be mostly offset by a couple of specific headwinds, which is what we saw. The most notable headwind was the $80 million of subordinated debt at 7.625% we issued in June, which we used to redeem $50 million of outstanding subordinated debt at 5.25%. This created a six basis point net drag on margin in the third quarter. We also continued to see the ongoing benefit of the purchase accounting accretion diminish as it contributed just four basis points to margin during the quarter. In addition, we had higher than expected average cash balances in the third quarter due to our strong deposit growth. While this put added pressure on the margin, we view it as a good thing as it created more net interest income dollars and gives us more funding to deploy into future loan growth. Looking ahead, we are well-positioned for more meaningful net interest margin expansion in the fourth quarter and into 2026, especially given the full quarter impact of the September rate cut and the potential for additional cuts. In fact, we believe we have a path to get to a 3% margin by early 2027. Combining our margin expansion with the loan growth outlook that Nick will talk about in a few minutes, we are in a great position to continue driving net interest income growth from here. Turning to slide six, our loan yields continue to reprice higher even in the current environment. Loan yields increased five basis points during the third quarter, which was a slower pace than the second quarter as we saw less new originations and payoffs, resulting in less overall churn of the portfolio. With $68 million of fixed rate loans scheduled to mature over the next twelve months, at a weighted average yield of 5.69%, and another $140 million of adjustable rate loans repricing or maturing at 3.85%, we still have more loan repricing upside ahead of us as new originations in the third quarter were in the mid-6s. We would expect this repricing to be a tailwind to margin going forward, especially as the portfolio continues to turn over. Overall, total earning asset yields increased seven basis points to 5.63% as we also saw an increase in securities yields during the quarter. The cost of total deposits was 3.19%, continuing the stabilization trend we have seen throughout 2025. However, we should see deposit costs decline in the fourth quarter as we have $1.7 billion of funding tied to short-term rates, including $1.4 billion of immediately adjustable deposits, that we repriced lower immediately following the recent rate cut in mid-September. Turning to Slide seven, we continue to see strong revenue growth trends, driven by the momentum in net interest income. Fee income has also been a contributing component to revenue growth in recent quarters due to increased swap fee income and investment advisory fees. We did see fee income decline in the third quarter, however, due to the lack of swap fee income. We mentioned last quarter that swap fees would continue to be part of the revenue mix going forward, and we expect that to continue to be the case. However, this just highlights the lumpiness of these fees. Over the past five quarters, swap fees have averaged about $300,000 per quarter, but have ranged from $0 to nearly $1 million. I can say that we expect a rebound in swap fees in the fourth quarter as we have already booked some in October. On slide eight, as expected, the higher than usual increase in noninterest expenses we have seen year to date continued in the third quarter as we have had some redundant expenses this year leading up to the core conversion. We added 17 full-time equivalent employees during the quarter, which drove an increase in salary expense. Marketing expenses were also elevated during the quarter due to advertising directly related to our focus on bringing talent and clients from the Old National and Bremer disruption, which have been bearing fruit. We feel much of the higher expenses in the third quarter were really opportunistic in nature as we continue to position the bank for ongoing growth. Now that the systems conversion is behind us, we would expect expenses to return to growing more in line with asset growth over time. With that, I'll turn it over to Nick.