Thank you, Curtis, and good morning. Unless I note otherwise, the quarterly comparisons I discussed are with the fourth quarter of 2024. Loan and deposit growth numbers I may reference are annualized percentages on a linked quarter basis. Starting on Slide four, operating earnings per diluted share was $0.52 or $95.5 million of operating net income available to common shareholders. We consistent revenue, stable balance sheet, and net interest margin combined with a decline in operating expenses drove positive operating leverage again this quarter. Deposit growth of $200 million or 3% was driven by strong growth in interest-bearing money market products, offset by modest declines in municipal and a $105 million decline in broker deposits. Our non-interest-bearing balances ended the quarter at 20.6% total deposits down marginally. Total loans declined $182 million during the quarter, due in part to the portfolio management activities Curtis discussed earlier. Offsetting some of those declines was growth in commercial mortgage and residential mortgage. With these results, our loan to deposit ratio declined this quarter to 91%. As part of our broader balance sheet management, we continue to strengthen our on-balance sheet liquidity by way of additional investment securities. The weighted average coupon in new purchases this quarter was approximately 5.56% and carried an effective duration of approximately three years. The impact of these balance sheet trends are shown on slide five. Net interest income on a non-FTE basis was $251 million, a $2.5 million decrease one quarter. While net interest margin increased two basis points to 3.43%. We yields declined eleven basis points linked quarter to 5.86%. Included in the loan yield is $13.1 million of accretion, attributable to the purchase accounting marks on the acquired Republic loan portfolio. Our average cost of total deposits decreased eleven basis points to 2.03% linked quarter. Through the cycle, our cumulative non-maturity deposit beta has been 29% and our total deposit beta has been 25%. We continue to manage deposit costs with this. Turning to slide six, Non-interest income for the quarter was $67.2 million. This included $2.5 million from income distributions and fair value adjustment related to equity method investments. Excluding this adjustment, fee income declined modestly primarily due to day count and transactional activity. Fee income as a percentage of revenue was 21% for the quarter. Moving to slide seven, non-interest expense on an operating basis was $182.9 million, a decrease of $7.8 million linked quarter. This decline was impacted by the timing of realized savings and the benefit of a $4.4 million decline related to professional fees this quarter. When excluding this and several smaller items, operating expense for the quarter would have been $187.2 million. Material items excluded from operating expenses as listed on slide seven were charges of $6.2 million of core deposit intangible amortization. As a reminder, in the second quarter, we will realize the full impact of annual merit and related increases as well as the impact of an increased day count on our expense base. Giving effect to these items, we expect operating expenses to range between $190 million and $195 million for the remaining three quarters of 2025. These items and trends have been factored into our annual operating guidance. Also, as a reminder, for the remainder of 2025, we expect to incur up to $14 million of additional Fulton First non-operating expense. Turning to reserve metrics. Provision expense declined approximately $2.8 million linked quarter to $13.9 million. Our allowance for credit losses to total loans ratio increased to 159%. And our ACL to non-performing loan coverage increased 193%. Slide nine shows a snapshot of our capital base. As of March 31, we maintained solid cushions over the regulatory minimums. During the quarter, total internal capital generation added $77 million in total equity, including the benefit of $16 million of other comprehensive income. AOCI ended the quarter at $272 million and our CET1 ratio at 11%. On slide ten, we are confirming our operating guidance ranges for 2025. Our original guidance incorporated a projected decrease in Fed Funds 25 basis points in March, and 25 basis points in June of 2025. Considering more recent events, we have updated our rate forecast to include four 25 basis point cuts in 2025 with the first beginning in June. Inclusive of these changes, we remain comfortable with our current guidance ranges. That said, our net interest income and non-interest income could trend towards the lower half of the respective ranges given the potential for a prolonged slower growth environment. With that, we'll now turn the call over to the operator, Josh, for questions.