Thanks, Tim, and thank you to everyone for joining us today. Our first-quarter results demonstrated the ongoing strength and momentum of our adjusted revenue, which increased 3% year over year, as our well-positioned balance sheet led to continued margin expansion driven by robust loan growth, continued fixed-rate asset repricing, and proactive liability management. The revenue performance combined with our ongoing expense discipline resulted in a 5% increase in pre-provision net revenue and 175 basis points of positive operating leverage on an adjusted basis compared to the first quarter of last year. Our core deposit-funded balance sheet and diversified revenue sources provide us with flexibility and resiliency to deliver stable through-the-cycle results. Our strong profitability allowed us to maintain our CET1 ratio at 10.5%, consistent with our near-term target, while growing our period-end loans by $2.4 billion, executing a $225 million share repurchase, and absorbing the 7 basis point impact from the final CECL phase-in. As Tim mentioned, tangible book value per share inclusive of the impact of AOCI grew 15% from the prior year despite the ten-year treasury rate being effectively unchanged. Our strategy in our investment portfolio to focus on investments with known cash flows through bullet and locked-out securities will continue to contribute to tangible book value per share growth as these positions pull to par. Net interest income continued its positive momentum with NII flat sequentially despite two fewer days in the quarter, and net interest margin expanded by 6 basis points. Proactive balance sheet management resulted in a 20 basis point reduction in the cost of interest-bearing liabilities sequentially. These actions, along with the continued loan growth and the repricing benefit on fixed-rate assets, more than offset the decrease in yield on our floating-rate assets. Loan growth also continued positive momentum in the first quarter. Average loans increased by 3%, the largest sequential growth in nearly three years, and period-end loan growth grew by 2%. Commercial loans grew 3% on a period-end basis and 4% on an average basis compared to the fourth quarter, driven by continued strength in production in middle market lending across our regions, led by Western Michigan, Georgia, and Cincinnati. Utilization improved by about a point to 37% sequentially. Utilization has continued to increase slowly during the first half of April. Consumer loans were up 1% on a period-end basis and 2% on an average basis from the prior quarter, led by continued strength in secured lending products such as auto and home equity lending. Shifting to deposits, average core deposits decreased 2% sequentially, driven primarily by normal seasonality in commercial. Our strong liquidity profile continues to provide us the flexibility to actively manage our overall funding costs. Interest-bearing core deposit costs were 2.39% in the first quarter, down 25 basis points from the fourth quarter, representing a core deposit beta in the low 60s. Demand deposit balances as a percent of core deposits improved slightly to 25% during the quarter. Demand balances were down 1% on an average basis and flat on a period-end basis compared to the prior quarter. We believe this balance level will be relatively stable over the near term. We ended the quarter with full category one LCR compliance at 127%, and our loan-to-core deposit ratio was 75%, up 2% from the prior quarter. Our focus remains on prudently managing total funding costs and maintaining a strong liquidity position. Our investments in Southeast branches will add momentum in gathering low-cost stable retail deposits. This approach will continue to provide us with the flexibility needed to manage uncertainty and to deliver a record 2025 NII despite the volatile environment. Moving on to fees, highlighted on page two of our release, our reported results were impacted by the valuation of the Visa total return swap. Excluding the impacts of the swap and securities gains and losses, adjusted non-interest income for the first quarter increased 1% compared to the same quarter last year, driven by growth in wealth and commercial payments. Wealth fees grew 7% over the prior year to $172 million due to $6 billion of AUM growth and increased transactional activity at Fifth Third Securities. Commercial payments increased 6% year over year to $153 million, driven by net fee equivalent growth, which was up 8%. Managed services and new lines provided over half of this growth. Capital markets fees declined by 7% from the year-ago period, primarily due to a slowdown in loan syndications and M&A advisory revenue, given the increased volatility and economic uncertainty. The securities losses of $9 million included a loss of $4 million from the mark-to-market impact of our non-qualified deferred compensation plan, which is offset in compensation expense. Moving to expenses, adjusted non-interest expense was flat compared to the year-ago quarter and increased 7% sequentially, slightly below our prior expectations. As is always the case in the first quarter, the sequential comparison is impacted by seasonal items associated with the timing of compensation awards and timing of payroll taxes. The previously mentioned deferred compensation mark-to-market reduced expenses by $4 million for the quarter compared to a $7 million benefit in the prior quarter and an $11 million increase to expenses in the year-ago quarter. Excluding the impact of the deferred comp mark-to-market, year-over-year expenses increased 1% as revenue-related compensation expense and ongoing savings generated by our value stream efficiency programs offset our continued investments in technology, branches, and sales personnel. Shifting to credit, the net charge-off ratio was 46 basis points at the lower end of our expectations for the quarter and flat sequentially. Commercial charge-offs were 35 basis points, up 3 basis points sequentially. Consumer charge-offs were 63 basis points, down 5 basis points, primarily due to seasonal improvement in credit performance in auto. Our NPA ratio increased 10 basis points sequentially, primarily driven by two ABL credits in our C&I portfolio. The CRE portfolio continues to perform well, with total CRE NPAs declining from 46 basis points to 38 basis points, including only 7 basis points of NPA in our non-owner-occupied portfolio. In solar lending, our NPAs decreased by over 50%, primarily due to our work to support customers where installers have gone out of business. For these borrowers, we assisted them in getting their solar installation projects completed, and these loans are now current with sustained payment history. For the second quarter in a row, commercial criticized assets decreased with a $20 million reduction, bringing criticized levels to their lowest level in the past five quarters. Additionally, early-stage delinquencies, 30 to 89 days past due, increased just 6 basis points and remain near the lowest levels we have experienced over the last decade. Our portfolio remains diversified across industries and geographies. Despite some increases in NPAs, given the impact of the rate environment and economic uncertainty, we have not seen broad-based weakening trends in individual industries or geography. Our provision expense for the quarter resulted in a $38 million build in our allowance for credit losses. This build was primarily attributable to continued growth in period-end loans and a deterioration in Moody's macroeconomic scenarios. These increases were partially offset by improvement in the overall risk profile of the portfolio, as indicated by the reduction in criticized assets and the previously mentioned improvement in our solar lending portfolio. Our ACL coverage ratio was 2.07%, down 1 basis point sequentially. We made no changes to our scenario weightings during the quarter. Moving to capital, we ended the quarter with a CET1 ratio of 10.5%, exceeding our buffered minimum of 7.7% and consistent with our near-term target. Our pro forma CET1 ratio, including the AOCI impact of the securities portfolio, is 8.3%, up 52 basis points year over year. We anticipate continued improvement in the unrealized losses in our securities portfolio, given that approximately 63% of the fixed-rate securities in our AFS portfolio are in bullet or lockout structures, which provides a high degree of certainty to our principal cash flow expectations. As Tim said, assuming the forward curve is realized, tangible book value per share should grow by about 10% for the full year before considering any future earnings, as the AOCI related to the securities losses will accrete back into equity. During the quarter, our $225 million share repurchase reduced our share count by 5.2 million shares. Moving to our current outlook, despite the uncertain environment, we remain confident in our ability to achieve record NII and full-year positive operating leverage. We expect full-year NII to increase 5% to 6%, consistent with our guide in January. The outlook uses the forward curve at the start of April, which assumed 25 basis point rate cuts in June, September, and December. Due to the resiliency of our balance sheet, we would expect to achieve record NII and achieve our full-year guide with no further loan growth and no interest rate cuts. Given our quarter-end loan balances, we now expect full-year average total loans to be up 4% to 5% compared to 2024, with the increase primarily driven by loan production and line utilization in C&I, combined with the continued growth in auto loans. We are assuming that the cash position, securities portfolio, and commercial revolver utilization all remain relatively stable for the remainder of 2025. Full-year adjusted non-interest income is expected to be up 1% to 3%. Continued economic uncertainty has slowed down capital markets activity. Wealth and asset management revenues are also impacted by the recent sell-off in equities. Commercial payment revenue is growing as expected, and its technology-led product offerings continue to ramp from growth in new relationships. As a result of lower customer activity, we expect to manage full-year adjusted non-interest expense to be up just 2% to 3% compared to 2024. Our expense outlook assumes no change to the accelerated branch openings in the high-growth Southeast markets and continuing sales force additions in the market, commercial payments, and wealth increase our production capacity to support our strategic growth objectives. In total, our guide implies full-year adjusted revenue to be up 4% to 5% and PPNR to grow in the 6% to 7% range, and positive operating leverage of 150 to 200 basis points. Moving to credit, we still expect 2025 net charge-offs to be in the 48 to 49 basis point range. The timing of charge-offs for individual credits may impact a particular quarter, but our full-year expectations remain consistent with our January guide. Given economic uncertainty and volatility, projected economic scenarios, we will no longer be guiding on provision builds. Moving to our outlook for the second quarter, we expect NII to be up 2% to 3% from the first quarter, due to the benefits of loan growth, fixed-rate asset repricing, day count, and the continued management of interest-bearing liabilities costs. We expect average total loan balances to increase 1% due to the full quarter impact of the C&I production in the first quarter and continued momentum in auto. Excluding the impact of securities losses, we expect adjusted non-interest income to be up 2% to 6% sequentially. The wider range is due to increased economic uncertainty impacting wealth and capital markets revenue. We expect strength in consumer banking due to seasonally higher card spend. Second-quarter adjusted non-interest expense is expected to be down 5% compared to the first quarter, due to the seasonal impact from the timing of compensation awards and payroll taxes in the first quarter. We expect continued investments in technology and marketing. We expect second-quarter charge-offs to again be in the 45 to 49 basis point range. Finally, we continue to believe granular organic loan growth represents the best use of capital to generate strong returns for our shareholders. Based on our current projected balance sheet growth, we expect to repurchase $400 million to $500 million of stock during the remainder of 2025, likely in the second half of the year. We will continue to target our CET1 ratio at 10.5%, and the ultimate amount and timing of future share repurchases will be dependent on realized loan growth. In summary, with a resilient balance sheet, diversified revenue streams, and disciplined expense and credit risk management, we expect 2025 to achieve record NII, positive operating leverage, and strong returns for our shareholders as we continue to invest for the long term. With that, let me turn it over to Matt to open up the call for Q&A.