With that, Bryan will provide more detail on the quarter and our outlook for the fourth quarter. Thanks, Tim. And thank you to everyone joining us today. Third-quarter results reflect disciplined execution of our strategic priorities. Expanding in the Southeast, scaling payments in new line, and maintaining operational efficiency while delivering strong performance in a rapidly changing environment. Adjusted revenue was $2.3 billion our highest since 2022. NII grew 7% year over year, and 2% sequentially and net interest margin expanded for the seventh. Consecutive quarter. Our balance sheet continued to benefit. From our balanced business mix through diversified loan origination platforms, fixed rate asset repricing tailwinds, and broad funding sources supporting proactive liability management Our fee businesses, led by wealth, commercial payments, and capital markets, delivered adjusted growth of 5% year over year and 7% sequentially. This revenue performance along with ongoing expense discipline, led to an 11% increase in pre-provision net revenue and 330 basis points. Positive operating leverage. On an adjusted basis compared to the third quarter of last year. As Tim mentioned, tangible book value per share including the impact of AOCI, grew to 3% from the second quarter. Despite only an eight basis point decrease in the ten-year treasury rate unrealized losses on our portfolio improved 9% sequentially. Underscoring the benefit of our bulletin locked out securities These positions provide certainty of cash flow and should continue to support tangible book value growth as they pull to par. Now diving further into the income statement and balance sheet performance, net interest margin, expanded 23 basis points over last year. And one basis point sequentially. Year over year, average loans are up 6% and excluding CRE categories, average balances are up 7%. Repricing benefits on fixed rate assets and disciplined management of liability costs continue to contribute to the strong NII As Tim noted, relationship manager headcount is up 8%, and average middle market loans grew 6% over the last year. Third-quarter middle market production rebounded sharply. Up around 50% on both the year over year and sequential basis. Production levels are stable to improving in 11 of 14 regions, with the strongest performance in Central Ohio, Georgia, Texas, and the Carolinas. Provide our fintech lending platform for practice finance, continues to drive growth. With balances up nearly $1 billion over the last year. This growth in middle market C and I and provides helps offset paydowns in our CIB and CRE portfolio. Where average loan balances declined modestly as clients accessed bond and permanent financing markets during the quarter. This capital markets activity was a contributor to our strong fee performance during the quarter. Production in our corporate banking verticals also rebounded this quarter. Up 24% over two q. Pipelines for middle market and corporate banking remained strong heading into year-end. Commercial line utilization helps steady throughout the quarter, and ended in the mid 36% area. In total, end of period commercial loans are up 5% over last year. Consumer loans grew 2% on an average basis, and 1% on a period-end basis from the prior quarter. We once again saw growth in nearly every major consumer lending category. Led by continued strength in auto and home equity lending. Shifting to deposits, Average core deposits increased 1% sequentially driven by DDA and money market growth. Average noninterest bearing deposits grew 1% sequentially and 3% over the prior year. Led by consumer DDA growth of 6% as we continue to drive strong household growth. Through our de novo investment. 3% over the last year, led by the 7% growth in the Southeast. Proactive balance sheet management, has allowed us to maintain our strong liquidity position while reducing our overall funding cost. We remain focused on granular insured deposits growing average consumer and small business deposits by 1% sequentially. Consumer and payments linked deposit growth has given us the flexibility to manage down wholesale funding which declined 3% sequentially This favorable mix shift lowered the cost of interest-bearing liabilities by one point. Our Southeast De Novo investments continue to deliver high quality low-cost retail deposits. Locations open to 2022 and 2024 are significantly outperforming expectations. With deposits per branch at month 12 averaging over $25 million. Outpacing our model target. And as Tim mentioned, our total cost of deposits in the Southeast is only 1.93%. Generating 200 plus basis points of spread relative Fed funds. We remain on track to open 50 branches this year with 23 opened year to date. We have secured approximately 85% of the locations for the additional 200 Southeast branches that we announced last November. We ended the quarter full category one LCR compliance at a 126% and our loan to core deposit ratio was 75%. Down 1% from the prior quarter. Moving on to fees. Adjusted noninterest income excluding security gains, and Visa swap impacts, grew 7% sequentially and 5% over the last year. Wealth fees rose by 11% over the year on $8 billion of AUM growth. And strong retail brokerage activity. Capital markets fees rebounded up 28% since sequentially, and 4% over the last year, driven by higher activity in loan syndications and m and a advisory. Commercial payment fees increased $5 million or 3% sequentially including a $2 million negative impact from higher earnings credits on demand deposit growth. This fee performance was driven by core treasury management, and new line related gross fees. New line related deposit hit $3.9 billion. Up $1 billion from a year ago. The securities gains of $10 million were from the mark to market impact of our nonqualified deferred compensation plan, which is offset in compensation expense. Moving to expenses. Adjusted noninterest expense, increased 3% compared to the year-ago quarter, and 2% sequentially. Reflecting continued strategic investments in technology, branches, and sales personnel. Even with the headcount additions of associated with these investments, overall headcount is down 1% versus last year. As our value stream programs continue to drive savings through automation and process By year-end, we anticipate $200 million run rate annualized run rates savings associated with our value stream Shifting to credit. The net charge off ratio a 109 basis points for the quarter. Which includes a $178 million in net charge offs from Tricolor. NPAs declined 10% sequentially, as expected and the NPA ratio decreased 65 basis Broad based credit trends remain stable across industries and geographies. Excluding Tricolor, commercial charge offs were 51 basis points compared to 38 basis points in the prior quarter. This increase is due to the resolution of certain non-performing loans for which specific reserves had been previously established. Commercial non-performing loans, decreased 14% to sequentially, and 30% since the first quarter. Consumer charge offs were 52 basis down four basis points. Which is the lowest level over the last two years. The sequential decrease is primarily due to improvement in solar lending charge offs which were down 39 basis points sequentially. Expected. The broad consumer portfolio remains With nonaccrual, over 90 delinquency rates. Stable and improving across loan categories. Provision expense included a $142 million reduction in our allowance for credit losses. Reflecting improvement in Moody's macroeconomic scenarios and a reduction in specific reserves. Even with the scenario improvement, our baseline and downside cases assume unemployment reaching 4.88.4% in 2026, respectively. We made no changes to our scenario weightings during the quarter. ATL as a percentage of our portfolio loans and leases decreased 13 basis points to 1.96%. The ACL as a percentage of nonperforming assets increased to 302% due to the decrease in NPA. Moving to capital. CET one ended at 10.54%. Consistent with our near-term target 10 and a half percent.