Thank you, Curtis, and hello, everyone. Starting on Slide 5. Our loans held for investment decreased by $45.5 million to $3.05 billion in the third quarter as compared to the linked quarter. The decline was primarily due to a decrease of $46.5 million in multifamily property loans, mainly due to the payoff of 2 loans totaling $39.6 million. As Curtis mentioned and we have discussed on previous calls, we've been experiencing a heightened level of loan payoffs and paydowns through the year, which have been a headwind to loan growth. Looking forward, we expect level of paydowns and payoffs to moderate as we look to 2026. Our yield on loans was 6.92% in the third quarter as compared to 6.99% in the linked quarter. Our loan yield was boosted by 8 basis points in the third quarter due to $640,000 in interest and fees related to the resolution of credit workouts. As a reminder, our loan yield was also boosted by 23 basis points in the second quarter due to $1.7 million interest recovery from the full repayment of a loan that had been on nonaccrual. Excluding these onetime gains, our yield on loans was 6.84% in the third quarter and 6.76% in the second quarter, representing an increase of 8 basis points. Looking ahead, the impact to our loan yields from the FOMC's 25 basis point reduction in their benchmark interest rate in September was not material, though we do expect our loan yields to moderate. That said, we remain optimistic that we can continue to reprice our deposits and manage our margin as market rates decline. Importantly, our new loan production pipeline continues to remain solid and economic activity continues to be healthy. As we discussed on our second quarter call, we have a strong position in each of the communities and metro markets where we do business and have capacity within our existing infrastructure to expand our lending platform. We're actively recruiting lenders who fit our culture to grow our lending capabilities as we work to accelerate our loan growth, which is a priority for our management team. We continue to be very pleased with the quality of bankers that we are speaking with who have an interest in joining South Plains. We are also seeing dislocation from recent acquisitions in Texas, which is creating more opportunity to expand our platform. As Curtis touched on, our goal is to grow our lending platform by up to 20%, and we are more than halfway there, having added lenders in Houston and Midland since our last call. This builds on our success from the second quarter where we recruited several experienced lenders in our Dallas MSA. While loans in our major metropolitan markets of Dallas, Houston and El Paso held steady in the third quarter at $1.01 billion, as can be seen on Slide 7, we remain optimistic that loan growth will reaccelerate as we continue to add lenders across our metropolitan markets. At quarter end, our major metro loan portfolio represented 33.2% of our total loan portfolio. Skipping to Slide 10. Our indirect auto loan portfolio totaled $239 million at the end of the third quarter, which is relatively unchanged as compared to $241 million at the end of the linked quarter. We've been carefully managing this portfolio with a focus on maintaining its credit quality over the last 2 years, which has resulted in a decline in loan balances of $57 million since the third quarter of 2023 when the portfolio was $296 million. Over this time period, we have seen competitors become more aggressive at the higher end of the credit spectrum while volumes have declined. More recently, we have tightened our loan-to-value requirements to further ensure that we are proactively managing this portfolio in the current environment as well as any potential challenges to come. It is also important to highlight that we are primarily a lender through auto dealers to borrowers who are in our markets, 86% with super prime or prime credit ratings at origination. Our borrowers' strong credit profiles can further be seen in the credit metrics of this portfolio as our 30-plus days past due loans, which totaled approximately $575,000, improved 8 basis points to 24 basis points in the third quarter as compared to 32 basis points in the second quarter. At year-end 2024, our 30-plus days past due loans stood at 47 basis points. We believe our 30-plus past due loans are the best early indicator to any potential signs of credit stress in this portfolio and believe our tightened credit standards will further protect the bank and the credit profile of our indirect auto portfolio as we look forward. Additionally, our net charge-offs for all consumer autos were approximately $160,000 for the quarter as compared to $350,000 in the linked quarter. Given the stable profile of our indirect portfolio, combined with the success that we are having adding lenders to the bank, we expect loan growth to gradually accelerate to a mid- to high single-digit rate through 2026. We expect our new hires to begin contributing to a loan growth in '26, while the level of payoffs begin to diminish. We also remain cautiously optimistic that economic growth across our Texas markets can remain resilient and provide a tailwind to growth. Turning to Slide 11. We generated $11.2 million of noninterest income in the third quarter as compared to $12.2 million in the linked quarter. This was primarily due to a decrease of $1 million in mortgage banking revenues as can be seen on Slide 12. The decrease was mainly from a $769,000 quarter-over-quarter decline in the fair value adjustment of the mortgage servicing rights asset. Overall, our mortgage banking revenues have been relatively flat over the last 4 quarters given persistently high mortgage rates combined with low housing supply. We are pleased with how the business is performing in this low transaction environment and the recent easing of market interest rates and believe we are well positioned for the eventual upturn in volumes as rates look set to decline further. For the third quarter, noninterest income was 21% of bank revenues, essentially flat with the linked quarter and the year ago 2024 third quarter. Continue to grow our noninterest income remains a focus of our team. I would now like to turn the call over to Steve.