Thanks, Rhett, and good morning, everyone. Let’s move forward to slide nine, our allowance for credit losses. On January 1st, we officially adopted CECL. In conjunction with the adoption, we added $8.7 million to our allowance, increasing it to $32 million bringing our ACL to total loans to 0.99%. Additionally, we had $10.2 million of fair value discount that was transferred to an unamortized fee account, which will be subsequently recognized over the life of the loans. We also recorded a $3.1 million unfunded commitment liability. The adoption resulted in a reduction to equity net of tax of $6.6 million. On to slide 10, our deposit portfolio increased by $153 million or over 15% annualized for a quarter ended loan-to-deposit ratio of 78%. This impressive growth is directly attributable to the deep client relationships built over time by our outstanding relationship managers even as we have continued to be judicious in our approach to raising deposit pricing. That said, significant pricing competition from less local competitors has caused rates to increase quickly. Our total deposit costs increased 71 basis points to 1.56% for the quarter and was 1.76% for the month of March. We do anticipate this upward pricing pressure to continue, albeit at a more moderate pace throughout the remainder of the year. On slide 11, we provide a detailed look at the composition of our deposit portfolio. A few takeaways we would like to highlight. Our average deposit account balance is $39,000, spread across approximately 87,000 accounts with our average commercial and consumer account balances being approximately $103,000 and $23,000, respectively. Approximately 74% of our deposits are either guaranteed or collateralized. We have approximately $964 million in public funds, of which $550 million is guaranteed through reciprocal deposit programs and the majority of the remainder is collateralized by pledged securities. And lastly, our total reciprocal deposits totaled almost $800 million, which includes the $550 million of public deposits previously mentioned. Overall, we are extremely fortunate to have such granularity in our deposit base as we have intentionally built our business around serving the needs of a diversified range of clients across a broad spectrum of industries and geographies. Moving on to slide 12, in light of the recent events, we have added some additional information regarding our liquidity position. We currently have over $1.6 billion of liquidity, consisting of cash, unpledged securities and collateralized lives of funding available from the FHLB and discount window, representing over 1.4 times coverage of our uninsured deposits. More broadly, during 2021 and 2022, we adopted a conservative approach to deploying excess liquidity, opting to hold cash in short-term securities to fund future loan growth rather than deploying to longer term securities. While this approach was to the detriment of our short-term earnings, we are now, unlike many of our peers, not beholden to a large underwater securities position. Instead, we now have sufficient funding without the need for costly borrowings or wholesale funding. On slide 13, at quarter end, our securities portfolio was at $880 million with a 69% AFS, 31% HTM mix of securities, an effective duration of 3.1 years. Our strategy to invest in short-term in 2021 and 2022 is now set to provide significant earnings tailwinds as over $307 million of principal will be returned to our balance sheet over the next year. This $307 million is currently yielding 1.8%, redeployed at a current market rate of 5%, results in earnings stack of over $9.8 million in additional revenue. On slide 14, you will see that this quarter, we had an increase in both cash and more notably, securities. As one may think, why are we buying securities at this point of time, simple, we took advantage of a unique opportunity to purchase approximately $50 million of SBA floating rate securities at a deep discount from a distressed institution. These securities have a three-year average life with yields in the mid-6% range, and at quarter end, had an unrealized gain of over $1.7 million. Our first quarter net interest margin was 3.31%, representing a 20-basis-point quarter-over-quarter contraction. Our yield on interest-earning assets increased by 47 basis points, primarily as a result of an increase in our base loan portfolio yield and 37 basis points of loan fees, which included 18 basis points or $1.4 million of loan fees associated with an acquired loan that paid off. For the quarter, our loan portfolio yield less fees was 5.20%, and for the month of March, it was 5.27%. Our interest-bearing liabilities increased 85 basis points, driven by an increased deposit costs, which totaled 2.05% for the first quarter and for the month of March was 2.27%. At quarter end, our cumulative deposit beta during the cycle has been approximately 28%. Looking ahead, we estimate our second quarter cumulative beta to be approximately 32% and we are modeling a cumulative beta of 36% by the end of the year. Our margin and rate guidance should be taken with the understanding that we are in an extremely dynamic market and any guidance is subject to change rapidly. That said, we are modeling second quarter loan yields in the 5.60% range, interest-bearing deposit costs in the 2.35% range and net interest margin in the range of 3.05% to 3.1%. Given these margin projections, coupled with the non-interest income and expense projections, we will discuss momentarily, we anticipate maintaining operating revenue in the $42 million range. On slide 15, you will see that we experienced an extra sensitivity shift from a generally neutral position at 12/31 to a slightly liability sensitive position at quarter end. This shift was primarily driven by the movement of approximately $90 million of existing money market deposits from sheet rate to an index pricing rate, and additionally, new money market growth of approximately $75 million also at an index price rate. To counter this impact, we are not only reinforcing pricing disciplines in our markets, but also looking at various balance sheet strategies to ease some of the funding pressures. On slide 16, our operating non-interest income remained flat quarter-over-quarter. While our first quarter results were lighter than expected, the slowdown was attributable to decreased capital markets and wealth management activity, both of which are heavily impacted in times of market volatility. As markets steady, we expect our entire platform to return to stable reoccurring income production. Looking ahead, we anticipate our non-interest income to be in the $7 million range for the next several quarters. On slide 17, you see we did a great job in managing our operating non-interest expenses, coming in better than our quarterly guidance and virtually unchanged from the prior linked-quarter. While the efficiency ratio did rise to 64% for the quarter, it was a result of external market pressures on revenue rather than internal expense increases. Looking at next quarter, we are forecasting expense run rate in a $28 million range, with salary and benefit expenses of $16.9 million, which represents a full quarter of merit increases and associated taxes. As we said before, longer term, we do expect ebbs and flows in various expense categories as we reinvest in our ability to acquire and serve clients and ultimately drive shareholder value. On slide 18, capital. During the quarter, our capital benefit from strong earnings and positive movement in our AOCI position. As we move through 2023, we fully anticipate generating earnings at a rate sufficient to fund growth and build our capital ratios. While we continuously monitor our capital levels and are prepared to adjust quickly if needed, today, we are well capitalized and strategically aligned to deliver strong ROEs and tangible book value growth. With that said, I will turn it back over to Billy.