Thanks, John. As you noted, it was a very encouraging quarter for us on several fronts. If I were to give a high-level summary of the quarter, I'd say we held deposit constant and redeployed $1.450 billion of cash and Fed funds sold into loans while our spread benefited from the strength of our core funding base. I'd also note good expense control with our noninterest income businesses performing close to expectations. As I make my remarks, I'll remind everyone that we had Atlantic Capital in the company for the full quarter versus only 1 month in the prior quarter. So we have to keep that in mind as we make some income statement comparisons with the sequential quarter. Slide 12 shows our 5-quarter NIM history. The quarter's net interest income of $314 million was a record with our NIM expanding by 35 basis points from Q1, reaching 3.12%. This was a $53 million increase in net interest income or approximately $36 million, if you normalize for a full quarter of Atlantic Capital in Q1. Loan yields, excluding PPP, grew by 22 basis points and earning asset yields increased by 36 basis points, and our cost of deposits rose by only 1 basis point. Accretion was $12.8 million for the quarter, and our core NIM, excluding accretion and PPP, rose 30 basis points to 3.00% for the quarter. Our $1.45 billion in loan growth equated to a 22% annualized growth rate, which brings the last 4 quarters' loan growth to 12.3%. We held deposits and the securities portfolio essentially flat, except for AOCI moves, and our cash and Fed funds sold balances were down $1.3 billion. Noninterest income of $88 million was up $2 million from the first quarter, but essentially flat when normalized for a full quarter of Atlantic Capital. As noted on Slide 14, 89% of our $1.4 billion in mortgage production was purchase volume and only 27% of production was sold in the secondary market. So mortgage revenue declined to $5 million for the quarter. I'll pause here to note that this means our first half 2022 mortgage production was essentially flat with the same period last year and a year with industries down approximately 36%. Housing supply constraints have continued to drive nice volume in our construction perm product. As John noted, Slide 15 shows the relationship between rates, gain-on-sale margins and our portfolio versus secondary breakout. You'll see that when rates are low and gain on sale margins are high, we intended to sell most of our production. Conversely, as rates move up and gain-on-sale margins declined, the portfolio percentage increases. You'll also note on that same slide that even with the second quarter's growth in portfolio loans, our ending consumer real estate portfolio is only back to the size it was in the first quarter of 2020. The correspondent division, as shown on Slide 16, had another good quarter with $28 million in revenue, similar to Q1 levels. This environment continues to be better for our interest rate swap capital markets business while fixed income is a bit weaker. Our Wealth Management business also continues to perform well. With respect to expenses, our $226 million in NIE was up $7 million from Q1, but Atlantic Capital's premerger run rate was approximately $5 million per month or an additional $10 million for 3 months versus 1 month in Q1. So we showed some improvement quarter-over-quarter. As John noted, our revenue growth outstripped our expense growth by 12.4%, so we had very good operating leverage this quarter. Similarly, this operating leverage was also reflected in the improvement in our efficiency ratio to 53.6%. Looking ahead to the next few quarters, with merit increases effective July 1, our expense guidance would be consistent with what we said on last quarter's call, quarterly NIE in the low 230s, potentially in the high 220s in Q4. On credit, we had $2.3 million in net charge-offs or 3 basis points and only $1 million of these were net loan charge-offs with the rest in deposit overdraft losses. As noted on Slide 24, our past dues and NPAs declined, and we also saw a further decline in criticized and classified assets. With respect to provision expense, we're cognizant of the increasing risk of a recession and we thus took a more conservative approach in our CECL modeling this quarter, again, increasing our weighting of the Moody's S3 scenario. This led to a $19 million provision expense, which brought our ending reserve to 115 basis points of loans or 127 basis points, including the reserve for unfunded commitments as is outlined on Slide 33. Turning to capital. Given the strong loan growth we were experiencing, we did not conduct any further repurchase activity in the quarter beyond the 300,000 shares we repurchased in early April. The 22% annualized loan growth and those early April repurchases combined to cause a slight decline in our regulatory capital ratios, though they remain strong with the CET1 ending at 11.1%. With approximately 70% of our investment portfolio of classified as AFS, the move in rates in the second quarter caused an additional decrease in AOCI, dropping our TCE ratio to 6.8%, and our TBV per share to $39.47. Given the high-quality nature of our portfolio, we don't view this accounting convention requiring a mark on only one component of the balance sheet as being a meaningful long-term measure and we expect these securities to accrete to par as they approach maturity over time. I'll turn it back to you, John.