Thank you, Jamie. Good morning. As Jamie suggested, I will be talking to you today about lending, deposits, and a bit about our strategic direction. While we've seen a quarter with lower market volatility in the sector than in the previous two quarters, there is still much to be done. Last year, when interest rates started to rise, we originated more fixed-rate lending than we should have. Our goal is to continue to reduce that exposure and diversify into index plus margin-based pricing focused in conservatively underwritten C&I lending, where we prioritize relationships. We have and continue to make great strides towards this end goal. All of our departments have worked together to manage the strategic direction of our diverse loan portfolio, which as of September 30, 2023, remains composed of 51% multifamily loans, down from its height of approximately 54% as of Q3 2022, 32% commercial business loans compared to approximately 30% as of Q3 of 2022, 9% consumer and single-family residence loans, 6% non-owner-occupied commercial real estate, and approximately 2% of land and construction loans. From an operational perspective, we have challenged our lending departments to evolve and adapt to the current climate. We have pivoted to focus on what supports both our clients and our operational health, maintaining a cautious yet proactive approach to growing with all eyes on asset quality. The loan yields Jamie referenced were the result of quarterly originations, 91% of which was in the C&I lending space. Loan fundings comprised of primarily high-quality, adjustable rate C&I, SBA, and mortgage lending totaled $245 million, offset by loan payoffs of $546 million in the quarter. Our goal is to continue to drive down our commercial real estate exposure and have a greater balance between fixed and variable rate lending. Over the near term, we are taking a cautious protectionary lending approach with our existing multifamily portfolio. On a long-term basis, we need to be and will be more diversified overall on all of our underlying assets. Ultimately, this will gradually increase the bank's CECL reserves as a more balanced portfolio will have a naturally increasing reserve. From a philosophical perspective, I want to highlight that we are a relationship-based bank, borne out of our synergies with our high net worth clients from our partners at First Foundation Advisors. We do not focus on transactions, but rather stickier and more robust relationships. Offering products like margin lines of credit on low leverage portfolios of assets under management can help deepen relationships with the platform while providing additional adjustable pricing and blunt fixed rate interest rate exposure in the portfolio, maintaining a low-risk credit profile. Regarding risk management, our achievement in maintaining high underwriting standards is not solely a credit risk measure, but a reflection of our organizational culture strength. It shows how deeply our teams understand and resonate with the principles that have always guided us in that we do not sacrifice credit quality. This discipline is why we have been able to reallocate internal talent from originating loans to assisting with portfolio management, asset quality review and an organic internal cross referral network. Looking at the breakdown of loans that we have originated so far year-to-date, the percentages are as follows, commercial business loans, 90%, multifamily, 2%, single family, 2% and other miscellaneous loans at approximately 6%. It is always worthwhile to reiterate the commercial business portfolio is diversified with no sector comprising more than third of the portfolio and only 12% of the portfolio exposed to commercial real estate. Our decision to temper fixed-rate lending, especially in the multifamily segment, should not suggest a lack of confidence in the asset class. In fact, now more than ever, workforce housing is in demand. There is a housing affordability crisis in the United States which cannot be ignored. The Housing Affordability Index just hit a new record low of 90. This means that housing affordability is down approximately 50% since 2021 alone. And since the peak in 2012, housing affordability is down nearly 70%. The cost of buying a home versus renting one is at its most extreme since at least 1996. The average monthly new mortgage payment is 52% higher than the average apartment rent according to CBRE analysis. The last time the measure looked this disconnected to wages was before the 2008 housing crash. Even then, the premium peaked at 33% in the second quarter of 2006. There is no state in the United States where housing affordability is worse than California, where seven of the 12 least affordable housing markets are found. California, a rent-controlled state, also happens to be where approximately 88% of our multifamily loans are located. As a reminder, having made a strategic decision years ago to be cautious of financing newly built properties, the bank has limited exposure to the Sunbelt region and even more limited exposure to high-end luxury apartment units. Newly built properties typically only have downside risk and are also generally less impacted by rent control in states like California. This shift illustrates more than a simple portfolio adjustment. It shows our agility, unity and shared vision with every team member contributing to a refined, collective, strong credit culture. Regarding our multifamily portfolio, its strength is evident in both its credit quality metrics and its low NPA ratio for the third quarter of 10 basis points as highlighted by Scott earlier. As you have come to expect, our underwriting remains staunchly conservative with weighted average LTVs of 55% for multifamily loans and 54% for single-family loans. Additionally, we are seeing the average duration of the portfolio continue to move downward just below three years, which would only further continue to support the repositioning efforts of the diversifying of its underlying assets. Our deposit growth, particularly in insured and collateralized deposits, mirrors our clients' trust. The proven high-level personal touch, combined with our strategic stance on rate adjustments, has fostered a deeper relationship with our clients, distinguishing us in the marketplace. Like our lending operations, we have a bifurcated strategic vision. Liquidity and funding have been the focus near term, while over the course of a longer term, we need to drive core funding back up, and we will do that. Now that funding appears to have stabilized, we are pivoting to a campaign where we aggressively look to grow core funding. This will allow us over time to drive down any overdependence on broker deposits and home loan bank advances. It is particularly important that we highlight the entire company's commitment to bolstering the growth of the bank's deposit franchise. From our First Foundation Advisors family to our Trust team, from in-branch tellers to the person that answers the phone when you call the digital branch, it is everyone's job to collaborate and champion the strength of what this platform can do. The breakdown of our deposits is as follows: money market and savings, 29%. Certificates of deposits, 28%, interest-bearing demand deposits 21%, non-interest-bearing demand deposits, 22%. Our deposits are diversified by geographic distribution with California accounting for 36% of total deposits, Florida at 17%, and Texas at 8%, which makes up the majority of our deposit portfolio with Nevada, Hawaii and other states making up 39% of the total. I'm also pleased to reiterate that our digital branches online account opening process has been completely overhauled to incorporate the latest in Plaid technology for seamless instant account opening and funding with real-time risk mitigation and fraud detection. Since its implementation on August 15, we have seen our application abandon rate drop from 53% to 23%, our completed applications grow from 63% to 94%, and our application approval rate increase from 46% to 66%. All of this was accomplished with a fully automated submission rate of 65%, meaning that no manual oversight was needed to create an account and instantly fund it. The second phase of this project will also be a rollout of the same technology into our physical branches, which should prove to create a best-in-class new account opening process, which will also be an elegant, fully digital solution. Additionally, our next focus will be partnering with our esteemed branch employees to aggressively grow our granular core retail deposit franchise, as I noted earlier. We will ask them to rise to the challenge of being the backbone of our institution because the growth of our retail channel is integral to our resilience and continued success. We will do this by empowering an outbound network of branch managers who will partner with the bank's product lines to visit clients frequently. The technology we have implemented, combined with refreshed policies and procedures and the careful elimination of redundancies have equipped our teams with the time they need to focus on client outreach. Simply put, we have empowered them to do what they do best, to get out and engage with the community. Before we move to questions, I'd like to take a moment to express my profound gratitude to every member of our team. From those in customer-facing roles to our back-office heroes, it is your commitment, mutual support, and shared aspirations that have not only steered us through recent challenges, but also fortified the very culture that makes us who we are. I will now hand the call back to the operator for questions.