Thank you, Brad. In the third quarter, our net interest income increased by $2.8 million and the net interest margin increased by 3 basis points. Continuing the trend from the second quarter. Linked quarter, the $2.8 million increase in net interest income was driven by cash flow repricing, an increase in earning assets and balance sheet actions. Including the reinvestment of securities portfolio runoff and repositioning our swap portfolio. Partially offset by deposit mix shift. With regard to cash flow repricing, in the third quarter, our earning assets generated $513 million of cash flows from maturities and prepayments. Assuming that all of these cash flows from loans were reinvested into like products and cash flows from securities reinvested into cash, such reinvestment would have generated incremental net interest income of approximately $3.6 million in the quarter from higher reinvestment yields. At the same time, deposit mix-shift has continued to slow. With average non-interest bearing and low-yield interest bearing deposit balances declining by $315 million linked quarter. This compares to a decline of $800 million in the same period of 2023. Assuming the majority of these balances shifted into higher-yielding interest bearing deposits, such mix-shift negatively impacted net-interest income by $2.6 million in the third quarter. We expect our net interest income to continue to improve from the gradual decrease in the Fed funds rate the initial 50 basis points of Fed easing is expected to ultimately add $1.2 million to our quarterly net interest income. In particular, total earning assets that were immediately impacted by changes in the Fed funds rate was approximately $7.6 billion at quarter end. Consisting of floating rate loans and investment securities, interest rate swaps and Fed funds. The 50 basis point decrease in Fed funds will reduce quarterly income from these rate sensitive earning assets by approximately $9.6 million. At the same time, total rate sensitive deposits that also immediately -- that were also immediately impacted by the change in the Fed funds rate were $9.7 billion at quarter end. Which excludes non-interest bearing demand and deposit accounts yielding interest rates of 10 basis points or less. The 50 basis point decrease in the Fed funds rate will immediately increase quarterly net interest income by approximately $7.1 million with an expected long-term positive quarterly impact of approximately $10.8 million. The difference between the immediate and long-term impact is due to time deposits repricing upon maturity compared to savings and interest bearing demand accounts, which can be repriced immediately. Thus, there will be an initial short-term negative impact to NII, then turn positive one to two quarters up, as time deposits reprice lower. We are currently well positioned to reprice our time deposits and improve our margins as 70% of total time deposits are scheduled to mature in the next six months and 88% of total time deposits are scheduled to mature in the next 12 months. In the third quarter, we took actions to adjust our balance sheet in response to changes in interest rates. This includes repositioning our swap portfolio by terminating $700 million notional shorter maturity swaps, with relatively higher fixed rates and executing $500 million notional of spot starting swaps at lower rates. As well as executing $300 million of forward starting swaps also at lower rates. The repositioning reduced our active, pay fixed received flow interest rate swaps by $200 million to $2.8 billion notional. And reduced the average fixed rate from 4.52% to 4.29%. The $300 million of forward starting, pay fixed received flow interest rate swaps have an average fixed rate of 3.03% and will become active in 2025 and 2026. In addition, we purchased $236 million of floating rate securities that have a positive 78 basis point spread to Fed funds to improve our net interest income and net interest margin. Our fixed rate asset exposure was 53% at the end of the quarter, down from 73% at the end of 2022. We expect to continue to actively manage our interest rate swaps and securities portfolios to take advantage of opportunities in this changing rate environment. Non-interest income totaled $45.1 million in the third quarter, up $3 million from the second quarter, as customer derivatives sales, merchant mortgage and loan transaction revenue and volumes improved. In the fourth quarter, we expect to recognize $2.3 million of a one-time charge related to the Visa Class B conversion ratio change. Adjusted for this item, we expect core non-interest income to be in the range of $44 million to $45 million in the fourth quarter as improved trends experienced in the third quarter continue in the fourth quarter. Reported and core expenses were $107.1 million in the third quarter. This compares to core expenses of $105.3 million in the second quarter which excludes a $2.6 million one time, industry wide FDIC special assessment, $800,000 of severance expenses and $600,000 of other core expenses that are not expected to recur. Thus, the core expenses were up a modest $1.8 million linked quarter, primarily due to increases in salaries and benefits as we continue to manage our expenses in a disciplined manner. We continue to evaluate expense levels and expect normalized core expenses in 2024 to increase 1% to 1.5% from 2023 normalized expenses of $419 million. To summarize the remainder of our financial performance, in the third quarter, net income was $40.4 million, and earnings per common share was $0.93. An increase of $6.3 million and $0.12 per share respectively. Our return on common equity was 11.5%. We recorded a provision for credit losses of $3 million this quarter. The effective tax rate in the third quarter was 23.33%, and the tax rate for the full year of 2024 is expected to be 24.25%. We continue to grow our capital and maintain healthy excesses above regulatory minimum well capitalized requirements. Our Tier 1 capital ratio increased to 14.05% and total capital ratio increased to 15.11%. Our accumulated other comprehensive loss continues to decrease and was $335 million in the third quarter down $39 million linked quarter and down $107 million from the same period last year. The decrease from the prior periods was primarily due to an increase in the fair value of our AFS investment securities caused by declining long-term interest rates as well as continued portfolio runoff. Our risk weighted assets to total assets ratio continued to be well below peer median, reflecting the lower risk nature of our asset mix. During the third quarter, we paid out $28 million to common shareholders in dividends and $3.4 million in preferred stock dividends. Note that the dividends on the Series B preferred stock in the third quarter was a partial quarter's distribution. In the fourth quarter, the full dividend on the Series B will be $3.3 million or $5.3 million total for both the Series A and B. We did not repurchase shares of common stock during the quarter under our share repurchase program. And finally, our Board declared a dividend of $0.70 per common share for the fourth quarter of 2024. I'll turn the call back over to Peter.