Thanks, Robert. Good morning, everybody. I’ll make some brief comments about the operating environment and our third quarter results. Afterwards, Will can share more detail about the financials and then we’ll take your questions. Before we talk about the bank, it's important to take a step back and reflect on the macro environment. Over the last two years, the United States government flooded the banking system with excess deposits, and basically provided a pandemic bailout with the PPP program and support for consumers. In that pandemic environment, every bank in the country was deposit rich and had near perfect asset quality metrics. Now, suddenly, the tables have turned as the Fed dramatically raises rates and embarks on QT, good old fashioned relationship, deposits, liquidity and credit discipline will drive the distinctions in bank performance over the next two years. This is an environment where SouthState should shine. Let me mention a few of our third quarter highlights. We're pleased to have two sequential quarters of very strong revenue growth, operating leverage and loan growth. Our earnings ramp has been steep and the momentum is obvious. Our PPNR per share is up 47% from the same period last year. In the third quarter, our NIM expanded significantly, operating leverage improved 8% and that drove our efficiency ratio down to 50%. We watched our NIM expand 43 basis points in the third quarter after expanding 35 basis points in the second quarter. That's pretty dramatic, 78 basis points of NIM expansion in just two quarters. And to be clear, that margin expansion is not the result of actions we took in the last two quarters, but actions we took in 2021 to retain more cash on our balance sheet than many others. We took the long view and held on to plenty of dry powder to put to work in this higher rate environment. As expected, the significant NIM expansion was partially offset by weakness in our capital markets and mortgage business. Mortgage production remains strong with our focus on purchase mortgages in our growing Southeast markets. But with low gain on sale margins, we decided to hold 78% of the production on balance sheet and only sold 22%. Total loans grew 13% on an annualized basis and were evenly split between the commercial and retail bank. Despite the recession fears, our asset quality metrics remained very clean and we had net recoveries in the quarter. Hurricane Ian hit Southwest Florida last month as a fierce Category 4 storm. That's an area of the state where we don't have branches. After the hurricane devastated Fort Myers, it moved slowly through our franchise in Central Florida, Northern Florida and on up to Charleston as a Category 1 storm dumping over a foot of rain in some places. So the primary impact to our customers and employees were power outages and flooding in Central and Northern Florida. We sustained very little structural damage and the power was restored within a week. As we examined our exposure to the hurricane, we determined that less than 1% of our loans are located in the hardest hit areas of Lee, Collier and Charlotte counties. And so far, we've received very few requests for payment deferrals. As I mentioned, our granular deposits will be a differentiator for us in a rising rate environment. With an abundance of cash on the balance sheet, we've lagged the Fed on the way up. Our deposit beta is 3% so far this cycle and our total deposit cost is only 11 basis points. Average deposit balances declined about 4% annualized, but that still left us with about $2.5 billion in cash and 5.5 billion in available for sale securities. So that's about 18% of the balance sheet that's liquid. I'll point out three areas that drove the end of period change to our deposits. First, we mentioned on our last earnings call the predictable fluctuation of deposits in the payroll business. If the calendar quarter ends on a Friday, deposits temporarily drop about $500 million. In this quarter, the third quarter did end on a Friday. So that's why it's better to look at average deposit balances when comparing quarters. And secondly, as we previously announced, we consolidated a number of branches in the third quarter, which accounted for a portion of the reduction. And third, with the increase in rates, we've worked with some of our high net worth clients to purchase about $275 million of treasuries through our wealth management division. And we're going to continue to work one on one with our valuable relationship clients, but at the same time managing the appropriate amount of balance sheet liquidity. As we look ahead, we are cautious about the economy in 2023 and we share the concern of many that a recession may be around the corner. Just hard to imagine a scenario where the Federal Reserve is moving this fast and something, maybe something we don't see now but something doesn't break in the economy. But even with this uncertainty, we like the hand we've been dealt on a relative basis. We've got excellent funding, surplus capital and we operate in four of the six fastest growing states in the country. Regardless of the environment, our team will show up to work each day. And we're going to continue to deliver exceptional client service and build franchise value, one customer at a time. With that, I'll turn it over to Will to give you more detail on the financial results.