Thank you, Jerry. Slide 5 provides more color on the encouraging trends we are seeing with net interest income and net interest margin. We expected net interest margin expansion to return in the fourth quarter given 3 Fed rate cuts in late 2025. And this is exactly what happened as the margin increased 12 basis points to 2.75%, primarily due to lower deposit costs. With margin expansion and continued earning asset growth, we saw net interest income increase 5% during the quarter. Last quarter, we mentioned that we saw a path to get back to a 3% net interest margin by early 2027. Given the expansion we saw in the fourth quarter and as we look ahead to repricing opportunities in 2026, we are actually pulling forward and believe we can get to 3% NIM by the end of 2026, and this does not assume any additional rate cuts. As a result, we are very optimistic about our ability to continue driving net interest income growth going forward. Slide 6 highlights the declining deposit costs I mentioned, which decreased 22 basis points to 2.97% in the fourth quarter. At year-end, we had $1.8 billion of funding tied to short-term rates, including $1.4 billion of immediately adjustable deposits. As a result, given the Fed rate cuts in September, October and December of 2025, we are able to reprice a good portion of the book lower, driving lower deposit costs and boosting net interest margin. We could see deposit costs move a bit lower in the first quarter as we recognize the full quarter impact of the December rate cut. But absent any additional rate cuts, we would expect deposit costs to begin to stabilize again. On the loan side, we are very pleased to see yields hold steady in the fourth quarter despite the 3 recent rate cuts. This was a function of the loan repricing opportunities we have, which includes $637 million of fixed rate loans scheduled to mature over the next 12 months at a weighted average yield of 5.55% and another $106 million of adjustable rate loans repricing or maturing at 3.84%. With these lower-yielding loans running off the books and new originations in the fourth quarter going on the books in the low to mid-6s, we have further repricing upside ahead of us. We've also been active in increasing the variable rate mix of our portfolio to create better balance across interest rate environments. Variable rate loans now make up 22% of our loan book compared to 14% a year ago. Turning to Slide 7. We continue to see strong revenue and profitability growth trends. In fact, adjusted ROA was just under 1% in the fourth quarter, while total revenue increased 32% year-over-year. Noninterest income also bounced back in the fourth quarter, driven by increases in swap fees and letter of credit fees. After seeing no swap fee income in the third quarter, we generated $651,000 of swap fee income in the fourth quarter. Quarterly swaps have averaged nearly $500,000 per quarter over the past 5 quarters, but continue to be quite lumpy due to the timing and size of the fees. We expect swap fees to continue to be a portion of the revenue story in 2026. But given the shape of the yield curve and the current environment, we would expect them to slow a bit. Turning to Slide 8. Expenses were well controlled during the fourth quarter. Throughout much of 2025, we saw higher-than-usual levels of expense growth as we work toward the systems conversion of First Minnetonka City Bank in the third quarter. Historically, we have seen expense growth align with asset growth over time. With the conversion behind us, we expect it to get back to the pace as fourth quarter expenses, excluding merger-related, were up just 9.5% annualized, which is more in line with our expected pace of asset growth. With well-controlled expenses and strong revenue growth, our adjusted efficiency ratio declined to 50.7%, the lowest level since the first quarter of 2023. It is also worth mentioning that we exceeded our 30% cost savings estimate for 2025 related to our recent acquisition. With that, I'll turn it over to Nick.