Thank you, Curt, and good morning. Unless I note otherwise, the quarterly comparisons I discuss are with the second quarter of 2024. Loan and deposit growth numbers I will be referencing are annualized percentages on a linked-quarter basis. Starting on Slide 5, operating earnings per share diluted was $0.50 or $91.3 million of operating net income available to common shareholders. This compares to $0.47 of operating EPS in the prior quarter. As Curt noted, loan growth was modest during the quarter, growing $70 million or 1%. Loan growth was split between commercial and consumer lending with $29 million and $41 million, respectively. On the consumer side, we saw $41 million runoff in our indirect auto portfolio. We expect this portfolio runoff to moderate consumer loan growth slightly going forward. This portfolio was $430 million at September 30 with an average duration of approximately 2.5 years. Total deposits increased $592 million or 9% linked-quarter. Growth in time deposits, money market products, and interest-bearing demand accounts offset declines in non-interest-bearing products and brokered deposits. Our non-interest-bearing DDA balances ended the quarter at $5.5 billion or 21% of total deposits. Our NII guidance for 2024 assumes we will continue to see migration from non-interest-bearing deposits into interest-bearing products but at a moderating pace. On-balance sheet liquidity increased to 18.9% of assets and included an increase in cash and securities of $406 million. The impact of these positive balance sheet trends are shown on Slide 6. Net interest income was $258 million, a $16 million increase linked-quarter, while net interest margin increased by 6 basis points to 3.49%. These increases were primarily driven by the full quarter effect of the Republic transaction, the second quarter investment portfolio restructuring, and the previously mentioned balance sheet growth. Loan yields increased 8 basis points linked-quarter, growing to 6.2%. Included in the loan yield is $13.7 million of accretion attributable to the interest-rate marks on the acquired loan portfolio. Additionally, the non-PCD discount accretion was approximately $815,000 during the quarter, however is excluded from our operating earnings calculation. Actual interest rate discount accretion will be driven by the pace and magnitude of paydown, payoffs, prepayments, and other decreases in acquired balances. Our cost of total deposits increased 10 basis points to 2.24% linked-quarter, primarily due to strong growth in interest-bearing categories. Given the robust funding profile combined with declining market rates, we expect greater flexibility around funding costs in future quarters. In anticipation and as a result of the Fed's easing of 50 basis points in late September, we were prepared to manage deposit costs prudently on key products. Post that announcement, we began lowering pricing on our more rate-sensitive products. We will continue to actively manage our deposit costs. Turning to non-interest income on Slide 7. Non-interest income for the quarter was $59.7 million. This included a fair-value adjustment to the bargain purchase gain attributable to the Republic transaction. The original estimate of the bargain purchase gain recorded in 2Q '24 remains subject to potential revaluation for up to 12 months post-close of the transaction. Excluding this adjustment, fee income was strong for the quarter, increasing $1.5 million from the second quarter. Wealth Management revenues of $21.6 million, increased $606,000 linked-quarter, primarily due to increases in market value of assets under management. Wealth Management AUM equals approximately $16 billion at quarter-end and represents a new record-high for the company. Commercial Banking fees increased $879,000, driven mostly by an increase in commercial customer swap income. All other commercial categories were relatively in line with the past quarter. Consumer Banking fees increased modestly to $14.9 million and are largely transaction-based income items. Mortgage Banking revenues declined $809,000 based on a combination of lower volumes and spreads. Moving to Slide 8. Non-interest expense on an operating basis was $196.2 million, an increase of $1.3 million linked-quarter. We are beginning to see the cost realization of the Republic Transaction and early efficiency benefits from Fulton First. As noted on Slide 8, linked-quarter organic Fulton operating expense declined $4.6 million. Republic cost saves remain on track, looking down approximately 20% based on our starting point. We expect the remainder of cost savings related to the Republic Transaction to be fully realized beginning in January of 2025. Material items excluded from operating expenses as listed on Slide 8 were charges of $14.2 million of acquisition-related expenses, $9.4 million of Fulton First implementation and asset disposal expense, and $6.3 million of core deposit intangible amortization. As previously mentioned, non-operating expenses related to both Republic Bank and Fulton First should abate over the next year. Specifically, we expect to achieve our full-cost save run-rate for Republic Bank in January of 2025 and remain confident in our original 40% cost-save projection. Turning your attention to Slide 9, I'd like to walk through some additional information regarding Fulton First. This transformational program, which began over a year ago, is beginning to accelerate. The implementation costs to date of approximately $24 million have been attributable to a combination of consulting costs, real-estate disposition, and severance charges. As outlined in the deck, we expect additional charges of approximately $10 million in 4Q24, followed by materially lower implementation costs in 2025. Importantly, we expect to see a fully realized annual recurring cost save benefit of more than $50 million. We expect to realize that full amount in 2026. In the shorter term, we anticipate cost-savings of approximately $25 million realized in 2025. Worth noting, our $25 million in expected saves in 2025 is net of more than $10 million being reinvested back into the bank for future growth initiatives. While we are not providing official 2025 expense guidance until we close out 2024, we feel comfortable suggesting that total operating expenses for 2025 should remain largely in line with where we finished 2024. Turning to asset quality. As Curt mentioned, net charge-offs were relatively stable at 18 basis points. The non-performing loans to loans ratio increased by 12 basis points to 84 basis points at quarter-end. Our coverage ratios remain near historical highs with our ACL to total loans ratio at 1.56% and ACL to non-performing loans at 186%. Slide 11 shows a snapshot of our capital-based. As of September 30, we maintained solid cushions over the regulatory minimums, and on a linked-quarter basis, most of our ratios expanded nicely. Additionally, our tangible capital ratio benefited from an OCI reversal of approximately $67 million linked quarter. On Slide 12, we are confirming our operating earnings guidance. However, we do note a change in the interest rate forecast. Our guidance now incorporates a 50 basis point decrease in Fed funds in September and two additional 25 basis point cuts, one in November and one in December. Our 2024 operating guidance remains unchanged as follows. We expect our net interest income on a non-FTE basis to be in the range of $925 million to $950 million, however, coming in at the high end of our guidance. We expect our provision for credit losses to be in the range of $40 million to $60 million, which excludes the $23 million CECL Day 1 provision in the second quarter. We expect our non-interest income, excluding securities gains and bargain purchase gains to be in the range of $240 million to $260 million. We expect non-interest expense on an operating basis to be in the range of $750 million to $770 million for the year. As stated in past quarters, this estimate excludes potential non-operating charges we may incur during the fourth quarter and excludes CDI amortization. And lastly, we expect our effective tax rate to be in the range of 16% to 18% for the year, excluding the impact of the bargain purchase. With that, we'll now turn over the call to Liz for any questions.