Thanks, John. Net interest income totaled 29.4 million in Q2, up 492,000 from the previous quarter. Loan growth continued at a 6% annualized pace during the quarter with new loans coming in at a rate of 8.25% compared to the 6.28% we earned on our total loan portfolio in Q2. Deposits were essentially flat quarter-over-quarter, which increased our loan-to-deposit ratio to 97.7%. The pace of deposit migration has definitely slowed and non-interest-bearing deposits actually increased by 4.3 million in the second quarter. We did experience declines in interest-bearing checking accounts and savings accounts, which were down about $25 million combined. This outflow was offset by an increase in money market and CD balances of $21 million. The outflows that we did see mostly occurred in April, coinciding with taxes. The impact of the slowing deposit migration can be seen in the slower increases in the rates we are paying on our interest-bearing deposits, which increased by 17 basis points in the second quarter after having increased by 28 basis points in the first quarter, 40 basis points in the fourth quarter and 54 basis points in the third quarter of last year. Pages 11 and 12 of our investor presentation provide some additional detail on credit, which John has already covered. Non-performing loans did decrease by $3.5 million in the second quarter to $16.8 million or 0.63% of total loans. Provision expense for the quarter were $1.3 million, up $1.1 million from the prior quarter. Our allowance for loan loss ratio increased 1 basis point to 1.21% in the second quarter. There were no changes in our qualitative factors during the quarter, and we feel confident in our reserve levels. We did have $510,000 or 8 basis points annualized and net charge-offs in the second quarter. These charge-offs were very much customer-specific issues and not industry related. Slide 16 has some detail on our historic NIM and its components. As John mentioned, we're cautiously optimistic that NIM has bottomed out and should start to slowly increase from here. Loan yields have been steadily increasing due to a combination of loan growth and loan repricing and with the reduced pace of increases in liability costs, our NIM has increased each month this quarter. We have approximately 490 million of CDs maturing in the next 6 months. The majority of these CDs are in specials at rates a little north of 5%. So if rates and deposit mix remain unchanged, we could see flat to marginal declines in CD costs, where we have opportunities for more meaningful cost reductions if we do see rate cuts. Slide 18 of the presentation has some additional details on non-interest income and expenses. Non-interest income increased by about $200,000 to $3.8 million and should be between 3.6 billion and 3.8 million in the third and fourth quarters. Non-interest expense increased by 904,000 to 21.8 million due primarily to annual salary increases that took effect April 1. This was at the low end of our expectations. We expect core non-interest expense to be between 22 million and 22.5 million in the third and fourth quarters. We were a little more aggressive with the buyback and repurchased about 77,000 shares at an average price of $37 per share in the second quarter, which equates to 92% of tangible book value excluding AOCI. Slide 19 summarizes the impact of our capital management strategy has had on Home Bank over the last few years. We've grown adjusted tangible book value per share by 58% since 2018, increased our dividend by 67% since 2016 and repurchased 14% of our shares all while maintaining robust capital ratios, which positions us to be successful in any economic environment and take advantage of opportunities as they arise. And with that, operator, please open the line for Q&A.