Thanks, David. Now turning to Slide 4. David covered the highlights for the quarter from a lending perspective. So I will just add some additional color. Consistent with our focus on higher yielding asset classes, we were pleased to see that our second quarter funded portfolio loan origination yields continued to increase from the first quarter, because of the fixed rate nature of some of our larger portfolios, there is a lagging impact of the higher origination yields on the overall portfolio. However, these originations should have a positive impact on the loan yield in future periods. Our SBA construction and franchise finance channels continue to have very strong pipelines. Similar to what we accomplished in the second quarter, our goal is to fund the majority of this production using cash flows from other portfolios as we continue to rebalance and optimize the composition of the total loan portfolio. Moving on to deposits on Slides 5 through 7. For the quarter, our deposit balances were up $232 million or 6.4% from the end of the first quarter. The majority of the deposit growth during the quarter came from CDs were strong demand led by consumers resumed across the Board. We originated $417 million in new production and renewals during the quarter at an average cost of 4.93% and a weighted average term of 15 months. These were partially offset by maturities of $177 million with an average cost of 2.41%. Looking forward, we have $180 million of CDs maturing in the third quarter with an average cost of 3.07% and $263 million maturing in the fourth quarter with an average cost of 4.32%. Additionally, brokered deposits increased $36 million from the end of the first quarter as we brought in some funding early in the period to supplement on balance sheet liquidity. Non-maturity deposits were essentially flat quarter-over-quarter as declines in non-interest bearing checking and money market balances were offset by an increase in interest-bearing demand balances primarily related to Banking-as-a-Service. With the strong deposit growth during the quarter and a high level of on balance sheet liquidity, we were able to rationalize the deposit base and lower overall deposit costs by returning over $160 million in deposits priced at premiums to Fed funds. As a result of all the deposit and interest rate activity during the second quarter, the cost of our interest-bearing deposits increased by 51 basis points from the first quarter, which as David mentioned is the slowest pace of growth over the last four quarters. Looking at Slide 6 at quarter end, we estimate that our uninsured deposit balances were $938 million or 24% of total deposits down from 26% at the end of the first quarter. The decrease was driven primarily by the decline in money market balances, conversions to reciprocal deposits and drawdowns on construction related non-interest bearing balances. As a reminder, included in the uninsured balance total are Indiana based municipal deposits, which are insured by the Indiana Board for Depositories and neither require collateral nor are reported as preferred deposits on the bank’s call report. There are also certain larger balance accounts under contractual agreements that only allow withdrawal under certain conditions. After adjusting for these types of deposits are adjusted uninsured balances dropped to $685 million or 18% of total deposits comparing favorably relative to the rest of the industry. Moving to Slide 7. At quarter end, we had total liquidity of $1.2 billion including cash and unused borrowing capacity. With the deposit growth over the course of the quarter, cash balances increased over $160 million. Furthermore, our loans to deposit ratio declined to 94.6%. At quarter end, our cash and unused borrowing capacity represents 127% of total uninsured deposits and 174% of adjusted uninsured deposits. While it appears that the worst of the crisis is behind us, we continue to feel comfortable that we have the ability to meet any future customer liquidity needs if they arise. Turning to Slides 8 and 9. Net interest income for the quarter was $18.1 million and $19.5 million on a fully taxable equivalent basis down 7.3% and 7% respectively from the first quarter. The yield on average interest earning assets increased to 4.89% from 4.69% in the linked quarter due primarily to a 19 basis point increase in the average loan yield a 49 basis point increase in the yield earned on other earning assets and a 7 basis point increase in the yield earned on securities. The higher yields on interest earning assets combined with growth in average loan and cash balances produced strong top line growth and interest income increasing almost 12% compared to the linked quarter. As David mentioned earlier, while deposit costs continued to rise, the pace of increase was the slowest in the past four quarters and as a result, net interest income contraction was lower and in line with our expectations. We recorded a net interest margin of 1.53% in the second quarter, a decrease of 23 basis points from the first quarter. Fully taxable equivalent net interest margin for the quarter was 1.64% down 25 basis points from the prior quarter. As David mentioned in his comments, we carried higher cash balances during the quarter given the volatility in the banking industry, which we estimate to have negatively impacted net interest margin by 6 to 7 basis points. The net interest margin roll forward on Slide 9 highlights the drivers of change and fully taxable equivalent net interest margin during the quarter. Similar to this quarter with higher price new loan originations and variable rate assets re-pricing higher, we believe that we will deliver another increase in total interest income for the third quarter. Currently, we expect the yield on the loan portfolio to be up around another 15 basis points to 20 basis points for the third quarter. Based on yesterday’s Federal Reserve rate increase and perhaps another one later in the year, we also expect deposit cost to increase in the third quarter, although at a much slower pace than what we saw in the second quarter. Given these expectations as well as the impact of carrying higher on balance sheet liquidity, we anticipate the net interest margin and net interest income will contract further in the third quarter, although again not nearly at the same pace as prior quarters. Assuming the Federal Reserve hits its terminal rate later in the third quarter, deposit costs are expected to stabilize, allowing net interest income and net interest expense to begin rebounding or net interest margin to begin rebounding upward in the fourth quarter. Turning to non-interest income on Slide 10. Non-interest income for the quarter was $5.9 million up $400,000 from the first quarter. Gain on sale of loans totaled $4.9 million for the quarter up 20% over the first quarter and consisted entirely of gain on sales of U.S. Small Business Administration 7(a) guaranteed loans. Our SBA team continued its track record of growth as sold loan volume increased 16% quarter-over-quarter while net premiums continued to improve and were up 40 basis points. Looking at the bar chart of quarterly non-interest income, an item that I want point out was that with the growth in our SBA business over the last several quarters, we have been able to backfill and even exceed any potential GAAP in revenue due to exiting the mortgage business. Moving to Slide 11, non-interest expense for the quarter was $18.7 million, down $2.3 million from the first quarter. Excluding $3.1 million of mortgage operation and exit costs recognized in the first quarter, non-interest expense on a comparable basis increased $800,000 in the second quarter. The majority of the increase was in salaries and employee benefits due primarily to higher SBA incentive compensation related to the increased origination activity. Deposit insurance premium increased as well due to year-over-year asset growth and changes in the composition of the loan portfolio. These increases were partially offset by declines in several other expense categories. Now let’s turn to asset quality on Slide 12. David covered the major components of asset quality for the quarter in his comments; I’ll just add some color around the provision and the allowance for credit losses. The provision for credit losses in the second quarter was $1.7 million compared to $9.4 million in the first quarter, which included the partial charge-off of the large C&I participation loan. The provision for the second quarter reflects net charge-off activity during the quarter and an increase in the reserve for unfunded commitments, partially offset by the positive impact of economic forecast on quantitative factors related to the allowance for credit losses on certain portfolios. The allowance for credit losses as a percentage of total loans was 99 basis points as of June 30th compared to a 102 basis points as of March 31st. The decrease in the allowance for credit losses reflects the positive impact of economic data and forecasted loss rates on certain portfolios mentioned earlier, partially offset by higher coverage ratios in the C&I and SBA portfolios. Excluding the public finance portfolio, the allowance for credit losses represented 1.12% of loan balances. With respect to capital as shown on Slide 13, our overall capital levels at both the company and the bank remain solid. The tangible common equity ratio declined 37 basis points to 7.07% due to the combination of an increase in the accumulated other comprehensive loss as interest rates ticked a little higher at quarter end and share repurchase activity partially offset by net income for the quarter. As David mentioned earlier, the tangible common equity ratio was also impacted by deposit growth during the quarter and maintaining higher cash balances. If you exclude the accumulated other comprehensive loss and adjust for normalized cash balances of $300 million, the adjusted tangible common equity ratio was 8.01%. From a regulatory capital perspective, the common equity Tier 1 capital ratio remained very strong at 10.1%. During the quarter we repurchased 203,000 shares of our common stock at an average price of $13.52 per share as part of our authorized stock repurchase program. In total, we have repurchased $38.9 million of stock under our authorized programs since November 2021. As a result of share repurchase activity, tangible book value per share increased to $39.85 at quarter end, up almost 4% year-over-year. Before I wrap up my comments, I would like to provide some additional comments on components of forward earnings. With regard to non-interest income as our SBA team continues to grow and deliver consistently higher origination activity, we expect non-interest income to be in the range of $6 million to $7 million in the third and fourth quarters, which equates to a range of $23.5 million to $25.5 million for the full year 2023, above our previous guidance. In connection with the increased level of SBA originations, we do expect compensation expense to increase as well. Therefore, we now expect total non-interest expense to be in the range of $18.5 million to $19.5 million for the third and fourth quarters. This equates to a range of approximately $73.5 million to $75.5 million for the full year, which excludes approximately $3 million of mortgage related costs recognized in the first quarter. Looking forward to 2024, we are extremely optimistic about the ability to generate strong revenue growth. Even if the Federal Reserve stays higher for longer, continued improvement in the composition of the loan portfolio combined with stable deposit costs should produce growth in net interest income and an improved net interest margin. Furthermore, non-interest income should continue an upward trend as SBA and banking as a service fees increase. When adding a mid-single-digit percentage growth in operating expenses we are currently forecasting 2024 earnings to earnings per share to be north of $3 per share. With that, I will turn it back to the operator so we can take your questions.