Thanks David. As David covered the loan portfolio, let's turn to Slides 5 and 6 where I will cover deposits in more detail. While the average balance of deposits increased by over $185 million, or 4.7% during the second quarter, period end deposits were essentially flat with the quarter-over-quarter. Similar to the first quarter, we experienced continued growth in CDs and FinTech partnership deposits and used a portion of the liquidity provided by this growth to pay down $139 million of higher cost brokered deposit balances. Non-maturity deposits were up almost $55 million, or 2.8%, driven by increases in FinTech partnership deposits. Deposits from our FinTech partners, including those classified as broker deposits were up 34% from the first quarter and totaled $375 million at quarter-end. Additionally, these partners generated almost $8.5 billion in payments volume, which was up 40% from the volume we processed in the first quarter. Total FinTech partnership revenue was $582,000 in the second quarter, down slightly from the linked quarter, with the majority of this revenue consisting of recurring interest income, oversight and transaction fees. Related to CD activity during the quarter, total balances were up $91 million from the linked quarter, driven by continued strong demand in the consumer channel. We originated $404 million in new production and renewals during the second quarter at an average cost of 4.97% in a weighted average term of 19 months. These were partially offset by maturities of $345 million with an average cost of 4.88%. Looking forward, we have $397 million of CDs maturing in the third quarter of 2024 with an average cost of 5.05%, and $224 million maturing in the fourth quarter with an average cost of 5.03%. So assuming new production rates remain in line with those in the second quarter, we have reached an inflection point on CD pricing, which should contribute heavily to stabilizing and perhaps even reducing deposit costs in future periods under a higher for longer rate environment. Should the Fed begin to lower interest rates, there is potential for added benefit, but again, the commentary I provided is not dependent on that. Moving to Slide 6, at quarter-end, total liquidity remains very strong as we had cash and unused borrowing capacity of $1.7 billion. As mentioned a moment ago, we deployed some of the liquidity provided by deposit inflows to pay down higher cost broker deposits as well as to fund loan growth and securities purchases during the quarter, with total loan balances up about $51 million. While deposit balances were flat quarter-over-quarter, the loans to deposit ratio increased modestly to 92.7% from 91.5% at the end of the first quarter. At quarter-end, our cash and unused borrowing capacity represents 150% of total uninsured deposits and 197% of adjusted uninsured deposits. Turning to Slide 7 and 8, net interest income for the quarter was $21.3 million and $22.5 million on a fully taxable equivalent basis, up 2.9% and 2.6%, respectively from the first quarter. The yield on average interest earning assets increased to 5.54% from 5.45% in the linked quarter, due primarily to a 10 basis point increase in the yield earned on loans and a 21 basis point increase in the yield earned on securities, partially offset by an eleven basis point decline in the yield earned on other earning assets. The higher yields on interest earning assets combined with the growth in average loan and securities balances produced solid top line growth in interest income, increasing over 4% compared to the linked quarter, factoring in growth in average interest bearing deposit balances and a modest increase in the cost of deposit funds. Net interest income was up almost 3% during the quarter, building on last quarter’s increase and further distancing us from the low point of the third quarter of 2023 as shown in the bar chart on Slide 7. Net interest margin for the first quarter was 1.67% and 1.76% on a fully taxable equivalent basis, both increases of 1 basis point from the first quarter. The net interest margin roll forward on Slide 8 highlights the drivers of change in fully taxable equivalent net interest margin during the quarter. One item I would like to point out on this chart related to the impact of deposits in the quarter is that the impact is really more a factor of volume than it is rate. That is, as I mentioned earlier, average interest bearing deposits were up over $185 million during the quarter, whereas average loan balances were only up $44 million. The pace of increase in net interest income and net interest margin was down compared to the past two quarters due primarily to lower growth in average loan balances as we experienced both early payoffs and later than expected funding of some larger balanced loans. Specifically, we saw paydowns of certain commercial and industrial and construction balances, all of which had attractive pricing, and we experienced a delay on a large investor commercial real estate deal that was supposed to fund early in the quarter but did not get closed until the last week of June. In total, we estimate that these items negatively impacted net interest income by approximately $375,000 and net interest margin by 2 basis points. However, loan pipelines remain strong and with our focus on improving the composition of the loan portfolio and replacing lower yielding assets with higher yielding and variable rate production, we continue to forecast growth in total interest income throughout the rest of the year. Currently, we expect the yield on the loan portfolio to be up in the range of 10 basis points to 15 basis points in the third quarter and another 15 basis points to 20 basis points in the fourth quarter. Related to deposits, looking at the graph on Slide 8 that tracks our monthly rate on interest bearing deposits against the Fed funds rate, you can see the stability in deposit costs over the last several months. So going forward, with short-term rates stabilized and CD pricing expected to reach an inflection point here in the third quarter, we anticipate that interest bearing deposit costs should be relatively consistent with the second quarter, which should be a catalyst in driving continued net interest margin expansion. Turning to non-interest income on Slide 9, non-interest income for the quarter was $11 million, up $2.7 million, or 32% from the first quarter. Gain on sale of loans totaled $8.3 million for the quarter, up 27% over the first quarter and setting another quarterly record for our SBA team. Loan sale volume was $98.6 million, up 19% and rebounding from the seasonally low first quarter, while net gain on sale premiums saw a modest increase of 6 basis points. Other non-interest income was also up compared to the prior quarter, increasing $1.2 million due primarily to distributions received from fund investments. These increases were partially offset by a decline in net servicing revenue due to the fair value adjustment to the loan servicing asset. Moving to Slide 10, non-interest expense for the quarter was $22.3 million, up $1.3 million from the first quarter. Included in our results for the quarter were almost $600,000 of non-recurring expenses, consisting mostly of costs related to terminated technology contracts and to a lesser extent, expense associated with the 25th anniversary of First Internet Bank. Excluding these items, non-interest expense totaled $21.8 million for the quarter, up $700,000, or 3.5% from the first quarter and relatively in line with our forecast. Turning to asset quality on Slide 11. David covered the major components of asset quality for the quarter in his comments, so I will just add some commentary around the allowance for credit losses and the provision for credit losses. The allowance for credit losses as a percentage of total loans was 1.10% at the end of the second quarter, up 5 basis points from the first quarter. The increase in the allowance for credit losses reflects the growth in the loan portfolio and the continued shift in the composition of the loan portfolio towards certain loan types with higher coverage ratios. The increase also reflected additional reserves related to small business lending, partially offset by the positive impact of economic data on forecasted loss rates in other portfolios. The provision for credit losses in the second quarter was $4 million compared to $2.4 million in the first quarter. The provision for the second quarter was driven by loan growth and the changes in the composition of the loan portfolio, net charge offs and the additional reserves related to small business lending. If you exclude the balances and reserves on our public finance and residential mortgage portfolios, which have lower coverage ratios, given their lower inherent risk, the allowance for credit losses represented 1.32% of loan balances. Furthermore, with minimal office exposure, we do not require the excess reserves around that asset class that many other banks have. Moving to capital on Slide 12, our overall capital levels at both the company and the bank remained solid. The tangible common equity ratio was 6.88%, a 9 basis point increase from the first quarter. If you exclude accumulated other comprehensive loss and adjust for normalized cash balances of $300 million, the adjusted tangible common equity ratio would be 7.59%. From a regulatory capital perspective, the common equity Tier 1 capital ratio remains solid at 9.47%. Before I wrap up, I would like to provide some updates on our outlook for the remainder of 2024. As a reminder, our approach to forecasting this year is to assume that the Federal Reserve maintains a higher for longer outlook and does not lower the Fed Funds rate during 2024 despite the increasing commentary that rate cuts may happen as soon as September. We still feel confident that annual earnings per share for the full year 2024 will be in the range of $3 per share. With regard to net interest income, as I mentioned earlier, we expect loan yields to continue to increase while interest bearing deposit costs should be relatively flat for the remainder of the year. With annual loan growth in the range of 7.5% to 10% for the year, we still expect annual net interest income to be up 20% for 2024, with fully taxable equivalent margin continuing to increase throughout the year and be in the range of 1.90% to 2% in the fourth quarter. Related to non-interest income and non-interest expense, our view is fairly consistent with our comments on last quarter's call. With the combination of our SBA team continuing to deliver consistently higher origination activity and stabilization in secondary market pricing, our outlook remains extremely optimistic. And as a reminder, the expectations for higher fee revenue will be partially offset by higher expenses as we continue to add additional personnel in SBA and risk management, as well as make additional investments in technology and our risk management processes around our fintech partnerships program. With that, I will turn it back to the operator so we can take your questions.