Thank you, Nitin. Slide 7 shows an overview of 2024 metrics versus 2023. Our operating earnings were $94.9 million or $2. 22 per share. On an annual basis, fees were up 21% and operating non-interest expense was down 3%. Provision expense for credit losses were $24 million down $8 million from 2023, all while increasing our allowance for credit losses to 122 basis points, up 5 basis points. Turning to Slide 8, we show fourth quarter metrics. Operating earnings were $26 million or $0.60 per share, up $0.02 linked quarter and $0.13 year-over-year. Net interest income of $86.9 million was down 1% linked quarter. Operating interest income was $23.2 million up 8% linked quarter. Operating expenses were $71 million down 2% linked quarter and down 6% year-over-year. Our fee, credit, and expense trends continue to be strong and compare favorably to peers. Net charge-offs were $3.3 million or 14 basis points of loans. Provision expense was $6 million and the reserve coverage ratio of 122 basis points was flat linked quarter. Our ACL to non-performing loans increased to 469%. Slide 9 shows our average loan balances. Average loans were up $38 million linked quarter and up $281 million or 3% year-over-year. Average growth was lighter this quarter as we sold $47 million of our upstart consumer portfolio, had higher pay downs in the multifamily portfolio, and a couple of commercial closings that were pushed to the first quarter. On an end-of-period basis, loans were up 2% linked quarter with growth primarily in C&I and commercial real estate. We've updated a page in the appendix, which shows the Upstart and Firestone runoff portfolios. The combined runoff portfolios are down $119 million or 71% year-over-year to $48,000,000 or 50 basis points of loans. Slide 10 shows average deposit balances. Average deposits increased $299 million or 3% linked quarter. End-of-period deposits were up linked quarter, primarily due to seasonally high payroll money market balances. Excluding payroll and brokered CD balances, end-of-period deposits grew 3% quarter over quarter. Year-over-year deposits were down 3% or $277 million, primarily from the New York branch sale, which closed in the third quarter. Adjusting for the $383 million of sold deposits from the branch sale, deposits were up 1% year-over-year. Average non-interest-bearing deposits as a percentage of total deposits remained at 24%, consistent with the prior two quarters. Turning to Slide 11, we show net interest income. Net interest income was down 1% linked quarter and down 2% year-over-year. Net interest margin was down 2 basis point linked quarter to 3.14% and December spot NIM was 3.18%. While we have headwinds of floating rate loans repricing lower short term, we also have several tailwinds. We have $1.5 billion of CDs or 59% of that book maturing in the next six months. We have $600 million of wholesale funding that matures over the first half of 2025. And further, we have $600 million of low yield received fixed swaps maturing over 2025 and 2026, with about half in 2025. Finally, we also have low yield fixed rate securities and loans that will mature and reprice at higher yields. Slide 12 shows our operating non-interest income up $1.7 million or 8% linked quarter, and up $6.5 million or 39% year-over-year. Year-over-year comparisons reflect the change to PAM accounting for our tax credit investment business. The growth in fees quarter over quarter was primarily driven by higher gain on SBA loan sales. We also had higher BOLI revenues and seasonal revenue sharing fees this quarter, which came in about $1.5 million above normalized run rate. Deposit related fees declined linked quarter due to the New York branch sale. This was the fourth quarter in a row where we've seen solid growth in overall fees. Slide 13 shows expenses. Operating expenses were down 2% linked quarter to $71 million and down 6% year-over-year. Year-over-year expense declines were broad based. Linked quarter, a decline in compensation, and occupancy and equipment were offset by higher marketing and professional service expense. Slide 14 is a summary of asset quality metrics. Non-performing loans as a percent of loans were 26 basis points, which were flat linked quarter, and up 2 basis points year-over-year. As Nitin mentioned, total delinquencies and non-performing loans were 52 basis points of total loans, the lowest percentage in almost 20 years. Net charge-offs of $3.3 million were down $2.3 million linked quarter and down $1.1 million year-over-year. Slide 15 shows that our CRE book remains well diversified in terms of geography and collateral. Our CRE concentration ratio was approximately 294% and credit quality of the CRE portfolio remains solid with non-accrual loans at 22 basis points of period end loans. Slide 16 shows details on our office portfolio. As noted last quarter, the weighted average loan-to-value ratios are about 60% and a large majority of the portfolio was in suburban and Class A space. We have very limited exposure to Boston's financial district and no exposure to high rise office buildings. Slide 17 shows details of our multifamily portfolio. The multifamily portfolio was $637 million or 6.8% of loans. The book is well diversified across our footprint with a weighted average loan-to-value of about 65%. While current credit quality metrics are strong, we recognize that economic uncertainties exist, and we are monitoring both new originations and existing portfolios carefully. Turning to capital, we have strong capital levels. Tangible book value per share was $24.82 and increased 1% linked quarter and 9% year-over-year. Our CET1 ratio was up 110 basis points to 13% and our TCE ratio rose 30 basis points to 9.4%, this due to the equity offering and higher retained earnings. As you know, we raised $100 million in equity in December as part of our MOE announcement. The raise improved our standalone capital ratios to support the merger and we issued about 3.4 million 0 shares. We were encouraged by the demand for the offering and the narrow 3.9% discount. Our top capital management priority remains supporting our organic loan growth. Year-to-date, we've repurchased $17.4 million 0 of stock at an average cost of $21.94. All of our repo in 2024 was done in the first half of the year and was completed below tangible book value per share. Currently, we do not anticipate repurchasing shares going forward until our merger closes. Given the pending MOE transaction in the second half of 2025, we will not be providing line-item income statement and balance sheet guidance for the upcoming year as we've done in the past. That said, we are encouraged by the momentum in our financial metrics and confirm comfort with the consensus net income cited in the December 16 merger presentation for 2025. And with that, I'll turn it back to Nitin for further comments. Nitin?