Thank you, Chuck. Good morning, everyone. Directing your attention to the second quarter results beginning with the highlights on Slide 4. Over the past three quarters, we've closed and converted three bank acquisitions, including the conversion of Professional Bank in early June. Our M&A strategy has contributed to our now statewide presence, growing share in all major Florida markets and positioning Seacoast among the largest Florida headquartered institutions and the only publicly-traded bank with an exclusive focus on the state of Florida. M&A opportunities may arise again soon, but for now we're focused on compounding tangible book value and organic growth through customer acquisition. Sequentially, net income in the second quarter increased 164% to $31.2 million and adjusted net income increased 68% to $49.2 million. On an adjusted basis, return on tangible common equity was 16.08%. Our capital position continues to be very strong and we're committed to maintaining our fortress balance sheet. The ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets increased during the quarter to 8.53%. Also notable, if all held-to-maturity securities were presented at fair value, the TCE to TA ratio would still be a strong 7.87%. We're pleased to have maintained stability in the level of overall deposits, despite an increasingly competitive environment. Our credit standards remain disciplined and focused on relationship lending, and our loan to deposit ratio ended the quarter unchanged at 82%. Credit risk metrics remained strong with low levels of charge-offs, non-accrual loans and criticized assets. We continue to maintain robust liquidity and our total borrowing capacity is 184% of uninsured and uncollateralized deposits. Turning to Slide 5. Net interest income declined by $4.2 million or 3% during the quarter, with higher deposit costs and lower purchase accounting accretion, partially offset by higher yields. Net interest margin contracted to 3.86%. In the securities portfolio, yields increased 28 basis points to 3.13%. Loan yields increased to 5.33% excluding accretion and the add on rate in June averaged 7.1%. The cost of deposits increased to 1.38%, while our funding base remains strong with 57% transaction accounts. Looking ahead, we're modeling net interest margin to decline approximately 30 basis points in the third quarter, stabilizing into 2024. Moving to Slide 6. Adjusted non-interest income was in line with the guidance we provided at $21.8 million, an increase of $1.5 million from the previous quarter and an increase of $4.5 million from the prior-year quarter. Service charges increased 7% with continued expansion of our commercial treasury management offerings and new customer acquisition. Interchange revenue increased 8% with higher transaction counts from both business and consumer customers. As a reminder, the Durbin Amendment became effective for Seacoast beginning July 1 of this year, so our interchange income in future periods will be lower with the constraints of those rules. The impact on net income is mitigated through our efforts to diversify revenue streams in recent years. Investments in our wealth management division have resulted in significant growth. And in the second quarter of 2023, wealth management income was higher by 8% from the prior quarter and by 20% from the prior-year quarter. The addition of an insurance agency business through an acquisition in the fourth quarter of 2022 added $1.2 million to second quarter non-interest income. Looking ahead, we continue to focus on growing our broad base of revenue sources, and with the benefit of the expanded franchise, we expect third quarter non-interest income of approximately $20 million to $21 million, having largely offset the Durbin impact with other sources of revenue. Moving to Slide 7. Wealth revenues increased 8% compared to the first quarter and 20% compared to the second quarter of 2022. Assets under management increased 36% from a year ago to $1.6 billion and have increased at a compound annual growth rate of 28% in the last three years. Our family office style offering continues to resonate with customers, generating strong returns for the franchise. Moving to Slide 8. Adjusted non-interest expense for the quarter was in line with the guidance we provided at $84 million. Increases from the prior quarter reflect running the Seacoast and Professional customer platforms in parallel for most of the second quarter. These platforms along with branding, systems and processes are now fully converted to Seacoast and cost synergies will be fully realized in the second half of 2023 and into 2024. Salaries and benefits on an adjusted basis decreased by $600,000, reflecting the absence in the second quarter of the seasonal effect in the first quarter of higher payroll taxes in 401(k) contributions. Data processing costs are typically volume based and the increase aligns with the larger customer base and higher transaction volume. Similarly, occupancy-related costs are in line with the bank's larger footprint for much of the second quarter. Near the end of the second quarter, we consolidated five retail branch locations. Looking ahead, cost synergies from recent acquisitions will positively impact the back half of the year and meaningfully benefit 2024. We've executed a number of disciplined expense initiatives in order to maintain our focus on efficiency, including a reduction of our headcount by 5%. In the third quarter, we expect expenses on a GAAP basis of approximately $93 million to $95 million. This includes the amortization of intangibles and approximately $2 million to $3 million in severance costs. The third quarter also includes additional marketing expenses and lower deferral of loan origination costs. Adjusted expenses for the third quarter are expected to be near flat to the second quarter. Looking further to the fourth quarter as cost synergies and efficiency initiatives take effect, we expect expenses to drop by $3 million to $4 million and maintain that run rate into 2024. Moving to Slide 9. The efficiency ratio on an adjusted basis was 56%. The increase quarter-over-quarter was primarily the result of declining net interest income as deposit costs increased. As we scale the company and become the leading bank in our Florida markets, we continue to pace our investments with discipline. Turning to Slide 10. Loan outstandings were near flat as we maintain our strict credit discipline and as we continue to see the impact of higher rates on market demand. Average loan yields increased by 3 basis points during the quarter to 5.89% and increased 16 basis points when excluding accretion on acquired loans. We expect loan yields to continue to increase in the coming periods. And looking forward, we believe loan outstandings will decline modestly over the back half of 2023. Turning to Slide 11. Portfolio diversification in terms of asset mix, industry and loan type has been a critical element of the company's lending strategy. Exposure across industries and collateral types is broadly distributed and we continue to be vigilant in maintaining our disciplined conservative credit culture. Construction and commercial real estate concentrations remain well below regulatory guidelines and below peer levels. We've managed our loan portfolio with diverse distribution across categories and retaining granularity to manage risks. Turning to Slide 12. Non-owner occupied commercial real estate loans represent 33% of all loans and are distributed across industries and collateral types. Importantly, C&I loans and the related owner occupied CRE, which is repaid through cash flows of the business, not from the sale or leasing of the property, represent 32% of the total portfolio. On Slide 13 and 14, we provide additional detail on the dispersion of non-owner occupied commercial real estate loans in markets across the state and in categories, including retail and office, noting the strong performance of these segments to date and key credit monitoring metrics. Diversification across industries and collateral types has been a critical tenant of our strategy and the low average commercial loan sizes are the result of our long-time focus on granularity and on creating valuable customer relationships. Moving on to credit topics on Slide 15. The allowance for credit losses increased during the quarter to an overall $159.7 million with an increase in coverage to 1.58%. The allowance for credit losses, combined with the $202 million remaining unrecognized discount on acquired loans, totaled $362 million or 3.6% of total loans, that's available to cover potential losses. Moving to Slide 16, looking at trends in credit metrics. Our credit metrics remain very strong. Nevertheless, we remain watchful of inflation pressures and the broader economic environment and are carefully considering the ongoing impact of higher rates on the economy. Charge-offs were 3 basis points during the quarter and have averaged 6 basis points in the last four quarters. Non-performing loans represent 0.48% of total loans and the percentage of classified assets to total assets was 0.9%. And in the allowance, we continue to assess the environment and the factors that might affect loan performance. In this quarter, the allowance for credit losses moved 4 basis points higher to 1.58% of total loans. Moving to Slide 17 and the investment securities portfolio. The average yield on securities increased during the quarter by 28 basis points to 3.13%, in part due to swap activity we undertook during the quarter. Additional rate hikes will benefit the securities portfolio as a result. Changes in the yield curve during the quarter were detrimental to portfolio values, increasing the overall unrealized loss position from the end of the prior quarter. Turning to Slide 18 and the deposit portfolio. Deposits outstanding were near flat at $12.3 billion. Transaction accounts represent 57% of overall deposits, which continues to highlight our longstanding relationship-focused approach. The cost of deposits increased this quarter to 1.38%, with the dynamic changes in the industry and the materially increased competitive landscape. Additionally, we had a full quarter impact of Professional Bank and, for the first time since the pandemic, we're seeing Florida seasonal residents leave the state to return North for the summer. One item that's unique to Florida. The Florida Bar Association in May amended the trust account program known as IOTA, requiring financial institutions to pay interest on these accounts at a specified spread to an index. This change impacted deposit cost during the second quarter by approximately 5 basis points. Overall, our expectation for the third quarter is that the cost of deposits will continue to increase with higher rates, though the extent of the impact is difficult to predict with certainty. That said, we continue to outperform peers in our cost of deposits as the environment serves to highlight the strength of our low cost deposit base and focus on relationships. On Slide 19, the bar chart shows the addition of balances in higher rate categories that affected the overall mix during the quarter. Seacoast continues to benefit from a diverse and granular deposit base with the top 10 depositors representing only 3% of total deposits. Our consumer franchise contributes 43% of overall deposit balances with an average balance per account of only $23,000. Business customers represent 57% of total deposits, with an average balance per account of only $109,000. Our customers are highly engaged and have a long history with us. And we have a peer-leading level of non-interest bearing deposits, representing 34% of the deposit base. This provides significant strength in maintaining deposit costs over time and reflects the granular relationship nature of our franchise. On Slide 20, demonstrating our significant capacity to fund potential outflows, the bar on the right identifies balances above the FDIC insured limits, excluding public funds accounts that have collateral backed protection. Uninsured and uncollateralized deposits totaled approximately $3.5 billion, which, if needed, would be almost completely funded by Seacoast cash and borrowing capacity at the Federal Reserve. Beyond that, Seacoast has an additional nearly $3 billion in sources of liquidity above the $3.5 billion. We have not used and don't plan to use the Federal Reserve's new bank term funding program. And finally, on Slide 21, our capital position continues to be very strong and we're committed to maintaining our fortress balance sheet. You can see the increase in tangible common equity to tangible assets in the second quarter as we move past the initially dilutive effect of recent acquisitions, reflecting our commitment to driving shareholder value creation. In summary, considering our strong capital levels, prudent credit culture and high quality customer franchise, we have one of the strongest balance sheets in the industry, providing optionality if the environment becomes more challenging and to continue building Florida's leading community bank. Chuck, I'll turn the call back to you.