Great. Thank you, Tim. First, with respect to the balance sheet growth, Tim mentioned the strong loan and deposit growth in the third quarter, excluding the impact of Macatawa that produced a balanced $1.1 billion of growth for both loans and deposits. The loan growth at the end of the acquisition was nearly 10% on an annualized basis, in line with our prior guidance of being in the upper and of our mid- to high single-digit loan growth forecast. Also, including the impact of Macatawa, we ended the third quarter with a slightly reduced loan-to-deposit ratio of roughly 92% compared to the 93% at the end of the prior quarter. I think it's important to note that noninterest-bearing deposits increased by approximately $708 million in the third quarter relative to the second quarter, with that growth driven mainly by the noninterest-bearing accounts associated with the Macatawa Bank acquisition. Total noninterest-bearing balances have remained stable at 21% of total deposits as of the end of each of the first, second and third quarters of this year. As to other aspects of the balance sheet results, total assets grew by approximately $4 billion to $63.8 billion, and our capital ratios increased slightly due to the strong earnings and the impact of the Macatawa acquisition. Turning to the income statement results. This was a very solid operating quarter for us, but as Tim mentioned, the quarter had a few moving pieces. To that end, I'll start off by highlighting what we consider the uncommon items and what they were for the quarter. From our perspective, the quarter included a nonrecurring day one provision for credit losses related to the Macatawa Bank acquisition of $15.5 million, unfavorable mortgage servicing rights activity of $11.4 million, acquisition costs of approximately $1.6 million with the negative impact of those items offset by security gains of $3.2 million. Each of those items are discussed on the second page of the earnings release, if you'd like to refer to them later. The quarter was also impacted by the inclusion of Macatawa operations for two-thirds of the quarter. So I'll touch on each of these topics during the remainder of my comments, but I just wanted to set the table with those items. Our net interest income increased $32 million from the prior quarter and represented a record high level amount of quarterly net interest income. A $3.1 billion increase in the average earning assets, including the addition of the Macatawa franchise for the last two months of the quarter and a stable net interest margin contributed to the increase in net interest income. Our second quarter net interest margin was 3.51%, which was stable compared to the 3.52% net interest margin in the prior quarter. Yields and rates on the major balance sheet categories were relatively flat with the loan yields at 6.9% for both the second and the third quarter, and interest-bearing deposit costs were down 1 basis point from the second quarter. Given the current rate environment, the consensus forecast for additional interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, we remain confident that our net interest margin continued to be in a narrow range around 3.5% in the fourth quarter of 2024 and into 2025. Given our relatively stable net interest margin outlook and the projected continued growth in earning assets, we would expect to again increase net interest income in the fourth quarter. We recorded a provision for credit losses of $22.3 million in the third quarter, which included the onetime nonrecurring day one CECL provision of $15.5 million related to the Macatawa Bank acquisition. Excluding this onetime day one acquisition-related provision, the provision for credit losses would have been approximately $6.8 million, which is down from a provision of $40.1 million recorded in the prior quarter and the $20 million amount recorded in the third quarter of last year. The lower provision expense in the third quarter relative to the second quarter was primarily attributable to lower specific reserves on nonaccrual loans improved forecasted macroeconomic conditions and to a lesser extent, portfolio changes related to an improved risk rating mix in an overall shorter life of the loan portfolio. Rich Murphy will talk about credit and loan portfolio characteristics in just a bit. Regarding the other noninterest income and noninterest expense areas. Noninterest income totaled $113.1 million in the third quarter, which was down approximately $8 million when compared to the prior quarter. The primary reason for the decline was due to the unfavorable mortgage servicing rights related revenue of $11.4 million, mostly due to negative valuation adjustments as mortgage rates dipped near the end of the quarter. Mortgage production revenue was also down slightly as gain on sale margins narrowed on what was slightly higher originations for sale production volume. Those reductions in mortgage revenues were offset somewhat by a $7 million positive change in gains and losses on securities. I should also note that the prior quarter included an approximately $5 million gain on the sale of certain premium finance loans which did not reoccur in the third quarter. And although we don't -- although we do hedge a portion of the MSRs, large movements in interest rates may cause some valuation impacts, both positive and negative, and the dip in the interest rates at the end of the third quarter was the cause of the current quarter negative valuation adjustment. But as Tim noted in his comments, subsequent to the end of the quarter, mortgage rates have risen, which at the quarter were done at these levels, would cause a positive valuation adjustment in the fourth quarter. Turning to noninterest expenses. Noninterest expenses totaled $360.7 million in the third quarter and were up approximately $20.3 million from the second quarter. The primary reason for the increase were: First, the noninterest-bearing expenses associated with the Macatawa Bank acquisition were approximately $10.1 million, including a $3 million core deposit intangible amortization expense. As this additional $10 million is only for two months of the quarter, we would expect approximately $5 million of additional Macatawa-related expense in the fourth quarter to account for a full quarter's worth of activity. Nonoperating and acquisition-related expenses were approximately $1.6 million in the third quarter compared to $0.5 million in the prior quarter. The remaining increase of approximately $9 million was primarily related to salary costs for increased staffing to support the company's growth, higher incentive compensation expense accruals and increased software expense associated with upgrading and maintaining IT and information security infrastructure and furthering our investments in digital products and services. Now the noninterest expenses, we believe were well controlled when considering the impact of the acquisition, even with that impact of the acquisition, noninterest expenses as a percent of average assets declined to 2.36% for the third quarter compared to 2.38% in the prior quarter and 2.41% in the third quarter of last year. This demonstrates improved expense operating leverage, and we'll continue to try to bring those numbers down. In summary, the third quarter results included a record level of quarterly net interest income supported by strong loan and deposit growth a stable and solid net interest margin. The quarterly results also had good expense control and stable credit metrics. Said another way, excluding the impact caused by the nonrecurring Macatawa day one related provision for credit losses and the MSR valuation adjustments, it was a really solid quarter for Wintrust, and we're very excited about the prospects for the remainder of the year and throughout 2025. We also continued to build our tangible book value per share during the quarter. And as you can see on Slide 12 of the presentation deck, we've grown tangible book value per share every year since we've been a public company, and we're certainly on track to do that again in 2024. Additionally, as we've recently attended several investor conferences where the topic of total shareholder returns was discussed on various occasions. We included a new slide, Slide 13 in the presentation deck that provides a graphical illustration of Wintrust total shareholder returns for the last one, three, five and 10 year periods compared to the KBW Regional Bank Index total returns. As you can see from that slide, Wintrust has consistently outperformed that regional bank index, which I think illustrates the resiliency of our operating model through a variety of economic cycles. So with that, I will conclude my comments and turn it over to Rich to discuss credit.