Thanks, Nicole. Since Nicole already covered the loan portfolio, let's turn to slides five and six where I will cover deposits in more detail. The average balance of deposits increased by $111 million or over 2% during the first quarter and period-end deposits were up modestly from the prior quarter. Growth in deposits was primarily driven by growth in fintech partnership deposits, reflected in both noninterest-bearing and interest-bearing demand deposits as well as money market accounts. The growth in deposits was partially offset by a decline in higher CDs and brokered deposits. Nonmaturity deposits were up almost $335 million or 50% reflecting the increase in fintech partnership deposits. Total deposits from our fintech partners were up 37% from the fourth quarter and totaled $881 million at quarter end. Additionally, these partners generated almost $23 billion in payments volume, which was up 21% from the volume we processed in the fourth quarter. Total fintech partnership revenue was over $1.1 million in the first quarter, which was up 30% from the fourth quarter as contributions from key partnerships continued to scale up and new pricing terms went into effect. Related to CD activity during the quarter, total balances were down $104 million or 5% from the linked quarter. The strong growth in FinTech deposits allowed us to keep CD pricing lower and manage new production volume. We originated $285 million in new production and renewals during the first quarter at an average cost of 4.07% and a weighted average term of twelve months. These were more than offset by maturities of $414 million with an average cost of 5.06%. Looking forward, we have $355 million of CDs maturing in the second quarter of 2025 with an average cost of 4.87% and $486 million maturing in the third quarter of 2025 with an average cost of 4.84%. In total, for the remainder of the year, we have $1.1 billion of remaining CD maturities, with an average cost of 4.73%. With current new production rates remaining in the range of 4.05% to 4.1%, we expect a continued positive pricing gap between new production and maturing CDs over the next several quarters, giving us confidence that deposit costs will trend lower over the course of the year. Moving to slide six. At quarter end, total liquidity remained very strong, reflecting cash and unused borrowing capacity of $2.1 billion. On-balance sheet liquidity grew through the quarter as growth in fintech deposits supplemented with existing cash balances from the end of the fourth quarter. We deployed a portion of this liquidity to pay off a significant amount of higher-cost brokered deposits in addition to the net decline in CD balances as well as fund loan growth and securities purchases. With modest deposit growth and loan growth of $84 million or 2%, our loans to deposit ratio increased to 86%, from 84.5% at the end of the fourth quarter. At quarter end, our cash and unused borrowing capacity represented 180% of total uninsured deposits and 230% of adjusted uninsured deposits. Turning to slides seven and eight, Net interest income for the first quarter was $25.1 million and $26.3 million on a fully taxable equivalent basis. Up 6.6% and 6.3%, respectively, from the fourth quarter. The yield on average interest-earning assets increased to 5.57% from 5.52% in the linked quarter, due primarily to a six basis point increase in the yield earned on loans and a 12 basis point increase in the yield earned on securities, partially offset by a 31 basis point decrease in other earning assets. A full quarter's impact of the Fed's rate cuts in November and December were felt during the first quarter as higher yields and average balances in the loan and securities portfolio were more than offset by the large decline in both average cash balances and the rate earned on these balances leading to a 1.2% decrease in total interest income compared to the linked quarter. However, the impact of the Fed rate cuts was more pronounced on deposit pricing, which when combined with significantly lower average Federal Home Loan Bank advance balances resulted in an almost 5% decline in interest expense and drove continued growth in net interest income. Net interest margin for the first quarter was 1.82%, and 1.91% on a fully taxable equivalent basis, representing increases of fifteen and sixteen basis points, respectively, compared to the linked quarter. The net interest margin roll forward on slide eight highlights the drivers of change in fully taxable equivalent net interest margin during the quarter. The yield on funded portfolio originations, which was 7.78% in the first quarter, up 50 basis points from the fourth quarter reflecting the strong growth in construction, investor commercial real estate, small business lending, and C&I. Pipelines remain solid in these lines of business, giving us further confidence that net interest income will continue to grow in future quarters. Related to deposits, looking at the graph on slide eight that tracks our monthly rate on interest-bearing deposits against the Fed funds rate you can see that our deposit costs are continuing to trend down along with the decline in Fed funds. With lower CD pricing across the maturity curve, we anticipate that interest-bearing deposit costs will continue to decline in the second quarter as high-cost CDs mature and are replaced at much lower rates with either fintech deposits or new CDs. This is expected to help drive continued net interest income growth and net interest margin expansion even without any further Fed rate cuts. At quarter end, we had $1.5 billion of deposits indexed to Fed funds, so if the Fed does resume lowering rates later in the year, the potential exists for further deposit cost reductions. Turning to noninterest income on slide nine. Noninterest income for the quarter was $10.4 million, down $5.5 million or 35% from the fourth quarter. As a reminder, the fourth quarter benefited from $4.7 million prepayment and terminated interest rate swap gains related to the pay down of Federal Home Loan Bank advances. Excluding these gains, the sequential decrease was $100,000 or 7%. Gain on sale of loans totaled $8.7 million for the quarter, up 1% over the fourth quarter with SBA loan sales driving this increase. SBA loan sales volume was $108.8 million, up 2% quarter over quarter while net gain on sale premiums were down a modest six basis points. The majority of the decrease in noninterest income was driven primarily by lower net servicing revenue resulting from a negative fair value adjustment to the loan servicing asset. Moving to slide 10, Noninterest expense for the quarter was $23.6 million, down $400,000 or 1.7% from the fourth quarter. The main driver was salaries and employee benefits, which decreased $900,000 or 6.7%, due primarily to a decrease in incentive compensation. The lower salaries and employee benefits expense was partially offset by seasonally higher consulting and professional fees as well as higher loan expenses due to collection costs. Turning to asset quality on slide 11. Nicole covered the major components of asset quality for the quarter in her 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 1.11% at the end of the first quarter, up four basis points from the fourth quarter. The increase in the allowance for credit losses reflects specific reserves taken on loan relationships in the franchise finance and small business lending portfolios, which were placed on nonaccrual during the quarter as well as growth in the overall loan portfolio. Partially offset by the impact of economic metrics and qualitative factors in certain portfolios. At quarter end, the small business lending ACL to unguaranteed SBA loan balances was 5.8%. Additionally, at a higher level, 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. The provision for credit losses in the first quarter was $11.9 million compared to $7.2 million in the fourth quarter. The provision for the quarter was driven primarily by the elevated net charge-offs, and the increase in specific reserves related to franchise finance and small business lending. Moving to capital on slide 12. Our overall capital levels at both the company and the bank remain solid. The tangible common equity ratio was 6.55%, which declined seven basis points as balance sheet growth outweighed the positive impact of lower interest rates on the accumulated other comprehensive loss. If you exclude accumulated other comprehensive loss, and adjust for normalized cash balances of $300 million, the adjusted tangible common equity ratio would be 7.17%. From a regulatory capital perspective, the common equity Tier one ratio remained sound at 9.16%. And before I wrap up, I would like to provide some updates on our outlook for 2025. We expect loan yields to increase as we continue to originate new production at rates well above the current portfolio yield. We also expect deposit costs to continue declining as, one, we recognize the significant CD repricing gap on over $1 billion of CDs maturing over the next nine months and two, we see the benefit of paying down a significant amount of higher-cost brokered deposits at the end of the first quarter. Assuming loan growth remains in the range of 10% to 12% for the year, and deposit growth in the range of 5% to 7%, we expect that full-year net interest income will increase in the neighborhood of 40% or more over 2024's full-year amount and fully taxable equivalent net interest margin will increase throughout the year and should be in the range of 2.35% to 2.45% by the fourth quarter of 2025. If the Federal Reserve were to resume reducing short-term interest rates, our net interest income and net interest margin would likely exceed these projections. One near-term change to our revenue outlook relates to noninterest income and specifically gain on sale revenue related to SBA loans. As many of you have probably read, the Small Business Administration is going through a number of changes right now, including elevated repurchase rates across its entire portfolio, as well as fresh amendments to seven program standard operating procedures. Additionally, we have established First Internet Bancorp as a top ten seven a program lender our activities are falling under a more watchful eye at the SBA. Therefore, we are making some changes to our loan sale process that align completely with SBA's standard operating procedure in order to protect the guarantee on these loans which will result in a longer hold period before we sell a loan on the secondary market. This process enhancement will cause a temporary one-quarter decline in gain on sale revenue, however, we anticipate we will return to a normalized gain on sale run rate as we approach the second half of the year. Additionally, the decline in noninterest income during the second quarter will be partially offset by higher interest earned on the loans during the hold period which will also benefit net interest margin for the quarter. On the expense side, our outlook remains consistent with the guidance we provided on last quarter's call. That is, we expect annual noninterest expense to be up in the range of 10% to 15% over the full year 2024 amount, with a modest ramp-up on a quarterly basis. And finally, with respect to the provision, as Nicole mentioned in comments, we believe we have made significant progress in identifying and acting on problem loans in the franchise finance and SBA portfolios. We recognized an elevated level of losses this quarter. If economic uncertainty is prolonged, we may experience additional losses in the second quarter. However, we are seeing a slowdown in the pace of new delinquencies which provides some level of optimism that the provision for credit losses will moderate in the second half of the year. With that, I will turn it back to the operator so we can take your questions.