Well, good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our fourth quarter earnings call. I'm Andy Harmening, and I'm joined here once again by Derek Meyer, our Chief Financial Officer; and Pat Ahern, our Chief Credit Officer. I'd like to start by sharing some highlights for the fourth quarter and then 2023 as a whole. From there, Derek is going to send an update on margin, income statement and capital trends, and then Pat will provide an update on credit quality. Now it's safe to say that 2023 was an extraordinary year for regional banks. From rapid interest rate hikes, to credit concerns, to all our bank failures, the industry is forced to grapple with new challenges that created uncertainty in the first half of the year. Here at Associated, we weren't immune to the volatility that impacted the regional banking group as a whole, but we weathered the storm through decisive actions that bolstered our liquidity and communication that was transparent with our customers. Importantly, we also remained forward-looking. This enabled us to pivot quickly and maintain momentum with our strategic plan. Over the course of the year, we reached several important milestones on our Phase 1 initiatives. We reached nearly $700 million in combined balances in our asset-based lending and equipment finance verticals. We surpassed $2 billion in outstandings in our prime, super-prime auto book and expanded the business within our home footprint. We launched a new brand campaign, made several product enhancements and sharpened our digital sales capabilities, driving a 19% increase in consumer checking household acquisition and a 7% decrease in attrition. We continue to punch above our weight in digital, launching 11 major platform upgrades and achieving a three year high in consumer digital customer satisfaction scores. We maintained strong momentum in mass affluent, where we added over $730 million in net new deposits since launch at the end of 2022. And all these efforts helped us grow our core customer base by over 3% in the back half of 2023, with growth in both our consumer and our commercial segments. To further build on this momentum, we announced a multifaceted second phase of our strategic plan in November, addressing expense control, organic growth and balance sheet repositioning simultaneously. The expense cuts and repositioning were completed in the fourth quarter. Multiple leadership positions have already been filled with top industry talent, and [RM] (ph) hiring is ahead of schedule. Simply put, we are on track. Now as we look at forward macro questions that remain with regards to the economy and credit and geopolitical landscape, closer to home, however, we're confident in our markets, where unemployment rates in Wisconsin, Minnesota and several other Midwestern states remain below the national average of 3.7%. We're confident in our Associated Bank team, who have consistently proven that they can drive best-in-class service, while continuing to bring new ideas to life. And we're confident in our plan that promotes growth and diversification to enhance our profitability without abandoning our foundational discipline on credit and expense management. With all these factors coming together at once, we are well positioned to deliver enhanced value to all stakeholders in 2024 and beyond. With that, I'd like to walk through some highlights from the fourth quarter as well as the full year 2023, starting on Page 2 -- Slide 2. On a GAAP basis, our fourth quarter results were impacted by onetime items tied to the balance sheet repositioning we announced back in November and the FDIC special assessment that was finalized during the quarter. After excluding these onetime items, momentum of our core business was reflected through adjusted earnings per share of $0.53. During the quarter, we continued to transform our balance sheet by executing on initiatives that helped us lower our funding costs and improve our liquidity position, while improving earning asset yields. On the funding side, our focus remains squarely on growing core customer deposits. After growing these core customer deposits by 2% in Q3, we add an additional 1% growth in Q4, with growth once again coming from both the consumer and commercial sides of the business. All in all, we grew core customer deposits by over $800 million in the back half of the year as we continue to realize the impacts of our customer acquisition and relationship-deepening initiatives. We also added broker CDs during the quarter as a way to replace FHLB advances. These actions and business results led to an overall decrease in our wholesale funding of 9%. Within our loan portfolio, our fourth quarter results were skewed by the $969 million in mortgage loans we sold toward the end of the quarter. But on an adjusted basis, we were essentially flat for the quarter. On the consumer side, we continue to see steady growth in our prime, super-prime auto book. This was offset by a decrease in our commercial portfolios, which was primarily driven by a decrease in Mortgage Warehouse balances. While commercial loan balance growth slowed in the back half of the year, we still saw loan balance growth by 5% relative to 2022 on an adjusted basis. Moving to the income statement. Funding cost pressures have lingered in this dynamic rate environment, but this pressure has continued to abate each quarter. Here in Q4, our net interest income was essentially flat versus Q3, and our NIM decreased by just 2 basis points. Due to the mid-quarter timing of our Q4 balance sheet transaction, we expect to see full benefit from our asset sales beginning in Q1 of 2024. Regards to noninterest income, our GAAP number is impacted by onetime items tied to our balance sheet repositioning during Q4. But on an adjusted basis, we saw another slight quarterly increase. Taken together, despite the significant funding cost pressures the industry experienced in 2023, we were still able to grow our total adjusted revenue by 5% for the year. In 2023, we are once again able to demonstrate an ability to control our expense run rate by identifying cost saves in underperforming areas and redirecting those funds into targeted investments that help us grow our customer base, deepen relationships and enhance our profitability profile. We did see a slight uptick in personnel expense late in the year, but that was largely driven by the acceleration of our previously announced hiring plan through our initiatives. As we execute on our growth strategy, our conservative credit culture remains foundational, and we've continued to monitor asset quality closely. In Q4, our NCO ratio decreased 4 basis points and our ACLL ratio increased by 6 basis points. We continue to see modest signs of a gradual normalization to pre-COVID levels but have not yet seen indications of broader issues impacting specific industries or geographies. Now, with several extraordinary items impacting our financials during the fourth quarter, we provided a detailed breakdown of EPS impacts from notable onetime items on Slide 3. These items can be summarized into two categories. First, the balance sheet repositioning we announced during the quarter impacted our income statement through a $133 million net loss from the sale of mortgages and another $65 million net loss on the security sale we completed. Combined, these losses impacted our GAAP EPS by $1.30. Secondly, the FDIC special assessment added $31 million to our noninterest expense during the quarter, which further impacted GAAP EPS by $0.20. Net of tax, our EPS came in at a positive $0.53 for the quarter. This adjusted number underscores the strength of our business, gives us confidence that we're on the right path with our strategic plan. And importantly, it sets us up for continued success in 2024. On Slide 4, we provide a bit more context for why we're bullish heading into 2024. As we've discussed previously, the first phase of our strategic plan announced back in 2021 was about laying the foundation through the addition of new loan verticals, new relationship-focused deposit gathering initiatives and the launch of an open-architecture digital platform that enables us to control our own destiny. Through these efforts, we've proven that we can execute as a company by driving diversified loan growth, riding the ship on the multiyear pattern of household attrition and achieving three year highs in digital customer satisfaction. The second phase of our strategy is designed to build on our momentum and position us for the future success of the company. This plan was dynamic, in that it enables us to address expenses, enhance organic growth and accelerate balance sheet repositioning inorganically, all at the same time. We knew we need to start by managing expenses, and we did, by identifying and executing on $25 million to $30 million expense run rate reductions, including a 3% reduction in force, around the branch closures and additional spending cuts. These actions, while difficult, set us up to reinvest dollars into initiatives that will help us accelerate household growth, deepen relationships, remix our balance sheet and improve our profitability profile. During the fourth quarter, we also completed a sale of mortgage loans and securities designed to further accelerate the financial benefits of our organic initiatives by disposing of low-yielding assets and high-cost funding. We sold nearly $1 billion of low-yielding mortgages and nearly $800 million of securities, enabling us to free up funding capacity and reinvest at higher rates. Now, successful execution of any strategy hinges on having the right talent in the right places. And we've made significant strides in bolstering our leadership team with top talent across the Midwest, who align with our culture and have a skill set to drive our plan forward. As our plans picked up steam in the marketplace, we're seeing that the message is resonating, not just for our customers or our existing colleagues, but for the others in the industry, who have started to view Associated Bank as an employer of choice. That's how we've been able to grow our RM base by 33% since 2021, and it's how we've been able to add talented leaders across key business segments in the past 12 months. Attracting top talent is the first step towards execution, and it's clear, we're off to a strong start. Moving to Slide 6. The second wave of organic initiatives we announced back in November, are on track. In fact, in some cases, we're ahead of schedule. In the 2.5 months since we made our announcement, we made significant progress adding commercial and small business RMs throughout our footprint. We've also already launched several marketing, product and digital initiatives, designed to drive customer acquisition, relationship deepening and retention. We expect to continue to roll these enhancements out as a steady cadence throughout 2024. Taken together, between the success we've seen in Phase 1 of our initiatives and the progress we've already made in Phase 2 of our initiatives, we're well on our way down the path to building a higher return profile for our company. That's what gives us confidence as we get into 2024 and beyond. With that, I'd like to highlight a few balance sheet trends for the fourth quarter, beginning on Slide 7. As we've discussed previously, the first half of 2023 was marked by industry-wide volatility and an ongoing battle for deposits. These dynamics combined to drive significant funding cost pressures and forced banks to rethink their funding strategies. While we're not immune from this volatility at Associated, we saw meaningful stabilization of balance flows and cost pressures in Q3. And that stabilization carried forward into Q4. In this more stable environment, the impacts of our relationship-focused deposit gathering initiatives, we're seeing much more clearly throughout the back half of the year. After growing core customer deposits by 2% in Q3, we saw incremental core deposit growth of another 1% in Q4. In both quarters, we saw net growth in both consumer and commercial loan balance -- commercial deposit balances, demonstrated the broad-based impact of our deposit gathering efforts. During the fourth quarter, we also did flex into some brokered CDs as a means to help pay down FHLB advances, which decreased by $1.8 billion during the quarter. As a reminder, our strategy is to fund our loan growth primarily with customer deposits. We expect to hold wholesale network funding levels in check as we move through 2024. And we remain confident in our ability to fund our growth at a reasonable cost, going forward, based on our initiatives. On Slide 8, we show an annual view of our deposit trends. We've consistently grown our average annual deposits as our balance sheet has expanded over the years, and 2023 was no different. With that said, our 2023 annual deposit numbers clearly demonstrate a mix shift from noninterest-bearing products into higher-yielding savings and CD accounts. This dynamic reflects the impact of the rising rate environment and the period of volatility we saw in the first half of the year. And as mentioned, however, the back half of the year pulled a different story. With our core customer deposit -- while our core customer deposit strength by 2% during 2023, they grew by over 3% in the back half of the year. On Slide 9, you'll see our deposit growth has come as a direct result of initiatives. Our deposit initiatives are designed to attract new customers, deepen existing relationships and enhance retention. Throughout 2023, we've seen proof points confirming we're on the right track across the bank. As of the fourth quarter, our consumer household acquisition rate was up 19% versus the same period a year ago, and our attrition was down 7%. For the full year, our household levels were essentially flat, but we consider this a key turning point for household growth as it comes on the heels of multiple years of shrinking total households. Digital has also been instrumental in our success, and we continue to make regular enhancements to our offerings after a very-busy 2023. Recent launches include an upgraded digital platform for commercial customers and a tool that provides easier switching for new checking customers. Finally, since launching our new mass affluent strategy, we've added over $730 million in net new deposits in this segment during 2023, more than doubling our full-year goal. This growth represents a roughly 14% increase from our prelaunch baseline. In the face of a very challenging environment in 2023, we've steadily continued to execute this plan with proven results. In 2024, we expect to drive core customer deposit growth between 3% and 5%. Moving to Slide 10, we highlight our loan trends through the fourth quarter. On a quarterly average basis, loan balances grew by $68 million, but they decreased by $977 million on an end-of-period basis, a reflection of the $969 million mortgage loan sale that settled towards the end of December. On both an average and period-end basis, Q4 loan growth was led by our auto finance business, where we continue to steadily add prime and super prime balances to our book. As a reminder, we do not intend to become disproportionately reliant on auto loans. But we view this portfolio as a means to diversify our customer book with high-quality, yield-friendly loans without stretching on credit. On the commercial side, we saw growth from our utilities business offset by net outflows in other verticals, including Mortgage Warehouse and general C&I. Within the C&I bucket, the quarterly outflow was primarily driven by a subset of lower-quality credits strategically moved out of the bank at par. Across our broader portfolio, we continue to seek selective growth that emphasizes relationships, quality and diversification while delivering accretive returns. This enables us to deemphasize lower-yielding, non-relationship asset classes over time. On Slide 11, we show loan trends on an annual basis. Average annual loans grew by $3.3 billion in 2023, a trend that reflects the torrid pace of broad-based loan growth we saw in the back half of 2022. Point to point, we grew total loans by over $400 million during 2023. And that 1% growth figure is inclusive of the $969 million in mortgage balances that were pulled off our books in December. Excluding that sale, we saw total loan growth of nearly $1.4 billion or 5% for the year. Consistent with the rest of the industry, it's clear that lending activity is slow going into the end of the year as our customers took a more cautious approach in the uncertain macro environment. With that said, we've continued to see encouraging signs of activity in our markets. We also expect to benefit over time from the key leaders in RMs, we've already hired throughout our footprint as they get up and running. Taking into account the current lending environment and the anticipated impacts of our initiatives, we expect to drive total loan growth of 4% to 6% in 2024. With that, I'll pass it to Derek to walk through the income statement and capital trends. Derek?