Great. Thank you, Thomas. As noted on Slide 12, there were no purchases of investment securities during the quarter, which was the primary driver of period-end balances declining by about $30 million, while the fully tax equivalent portfolio yield was unchanged when compared to the last quarter at 2.39%. Going forward, you can expect similar trends to continue for the foreseeable future as cash flows from the portfolio are profitably redeployed elsewhere on the balance sheet. At the bottom of the slide, you can see the anticipated cash flows for the next 4 quarters as well as the expected FTE roll-off yield, which is a new disclosure we hope you will find helpful. Turning to Slide 13. The benefits of the asset repositioning strategy were again evident this quarter, driving a favorable shift in the mix of earning assets, which coupled with disciplined loan pricing and well-controlled interest-bearing funding costs drove a 14 basis point increase in the FTE net interest margin during the quarter to 2.64%. This result was better than anticipated, which drove net interest income to the higher end of the guidance range for the quarter. Looking ahead, you’ll note that end-of-period loans are well above the average, which bodes well for both net interest income growth and modest further NIM expansion in Q3, even as funding costs will see a bit more lift relative to Q2 to fund that growth. Beyond Q3 into Q4, the NIM expansion likely moderates some, absent any rate cuts or meaningful changes further out on the curve. As you can see on Slide 14, it was a relatively good quarter for the company on the fee income front, delivering $10.5 million in revenue near the upper end of the guidance range for the quarter. Seasonal increases in both interchange fees and mortgage gain on sale drove the linked-quarter increase. Looking ahead to the remainder of the year, targeted hiring and treasury management, mortgage and private wealth should continue to deliver positive momentum. We would expect fee income to run rate in the $10.5 million to $11 million range per quarter for the remainder of the year. As evident on Slide 15, it was a good expense quarter for the company, coming in at the low end of the prior guidance. Seasonal declines in occupancy expense and well-controlled outside services expense were generally offset by additional hiring and related expense in the quarter, volume-driven loan fees and elevated levels of operational loss. Looking ahead, while investments in the business will drive the quarterly expense run rate modestly higher in the second half of the year, we would remain disciplined in our approach and therefore, continue to expect annualized expenses to remain less than 2% of average total assets, even with the slowing asset growth we noted earlier. Turning to capital on Slide 16, we saw some modest compression in risk-based ratios as strong loan growth late in the quarter helped drive risk-weighted asset growth from Q1. That said, we continue to feel good about the company’s capital position. With slower growth anticipated for the back half of the year relative to the first and continued runoff in investment securities, as previously noted, we’d expect all regulatory capital ratios to increase from here over the second half of the year. Finally, turning to the outlook on Slide 17. Now that the reinvestment activities from the securities sale in Q4 of 2023 have been completed, we are moving towards a higher level outlook methodology, which provides you with our current view for the remainder of the year. You can see the key balance sheet assumptions articulated in the first two sections on the slide. In short, loan and asset growth is expected to moderate from the recent pace and deposits should remain relatively stable. Excluding any impact from rate cuts, we would expect modest further NIM expansion in Q3 as the average earning asset mix will benefit from loan growth late in the second quarter. As mentioned previously, the pace of Q4 NIM expansion will likely moderate, again, excluding any impact from rate cuts. Combined, we would anticipate net interest income to grow in the upper single-digit range for the second half of 2024 when compared with the first. Fee income should continue with some positive momentum through the second half of the year with the quarterly run rate in the $10.5 million to $11 million range. While quarterly expenses in the second half of the year will increase modestly from $37.5 million reported in Q2, they are expected to remain less than 2% annualized of average assets. Finally, the effective tax rate for the full year should be in the 9.5% to 10% range. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Thomas.