Thanks, Brad. We expanded our net interest income and net interest margin for the third consecutive quarter. Net interest income for the fourth quarter was $120.2 million, an increase of $2.6 million or 2.2% from the previous quarter and net interest margin expanded to 2.19%. During the quarter, our NIM initially decreased in October, primarily due to the negative short-term impact of the 50 basis-point Fed funds rate cut in September, also negatively impacting the margin were higher cost commercial and public deposits that were carried over from the third quarter and ran off in October and November. NIM improved to 2.26% by December, driven by repricing of asset cash flows, a decrease in average cost of total deposits to 1.67% and slowing of our NIBD and low-cost deposit remix. With regard to cash-flow repricing, in the fourth quarter, our earning assets with fixed rates generated $518 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 were reinvested into cash, such reinvestment generated incremental net interest income of approximately $2.8 million in the quarter from higher reinvestment yields. Spreads on new loans improved after bottoming in October as mid and longer-term interest rates increased. We expect the wider loan spreads to continue into the first quarter. 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 $105 million linked quarter. This compares to the decline of $627 million and $315 million in the same period of 2023 and linked quarter, respectively. Assuming the majority of these balances shifted into higher yielding interest bearing deposits, such mix shifts negatively impacted net interest income by $900,000 in the fourth quarter, down from the negative $2.6 million impact in the third quarter. The cumulative impact of fixed-rate asset cash-flow repricing over 2024 has added nearly $16 million to quarterly net interest income as of the fourth quarter of 2024, while the cumulative cost of deposit remix over the same-period has decreased quarterly net interest income by $10 million, but at a slowing pace. The income spread between asset and deposit repricing are expected to continue to compound over the next several years, thus widening the cumulative impact and incrementally growing net interest income and margin. Total deposit costs decreased by 10 basis points linked quarter. When measuring the deposit cost from the start of the Fed funds cuts in September, deposit rates had fallen by 24 basis points by the end-of-the quarter and further reductions are expected in the first-quarter as the full impact of the fourth quarter Fed funds rate reductions are realized. We have reduced deposit rates across all interest-bearing products and are well-positioned to reprice our time deposits and improve our margin as 71% of total time deposits are scheduled to mature in the next six months and 95% of total time deposits are scheduled to mature in the next 12 months. We continue to strategically position our balance sheet for a range of rate outcomes. We have reduced our rate-sensitive assets to $7 billion, while our rate-sensitive interest bearing deposits remain at $10 billion. We intend to continue to closely manage the interest rate sensitivity of our balance sheet to ensure that we are well positioned for a variety of rate environments. In the fourth quarter, we actively managed our interest rate swaps and securities portfolio to take advantage of opportunities as interest rates shifted. This included repositioning our swap portfolio by terminating $1 billion notional shorter maturity swaps with relatively higher fixed rates and executing $200 million notional or starting swaps at lower rates. The repositioning reduced our active pay fixed received flow interest rate swaps by $800 million to $2 billion notional and reduced the fixed rate of 4.29% to 4.03%. We also maintained the $300 million of forward-starting pay fixed received flow interest rate swaps that were executed in the third quarter. These forward-starting swaps have an average fixed rate of 3.03% that will become active in 2025 and 2026. During the quarter, we purchased an additional $233 million of floating rate securities that have a positive 98 basis point spread to Fed funds, improving our interest income and margin. Our fixed rate asset exposure is 57% at the end-of-the quarter, down from 73% at the end of 2022. Net interest income and margin are expected to continue to increase as a result of the balance sheet actions together with the continued asset cash-flow repricing, slowing deposit remix and benefits from lower Fed funds rates. Non-interest income totaled $43 million in the fourth quarter, which included a previously disclosed $2.4 million of a one-time charge related to the Visa Class B conversion ratio change. Adjusting for this charge, fourth quarter non-interest income was $45.4 million, an increase of $300,000 linked quarter as revenue from trust services, customer derivatives and deposit service charges improved. In 2025, non-interest income is expected to be $44 million to $45 million in the first quarter and increased over the year as revenues from Trust services, merchant services and other transaction volume continued to steadily improve. Expenses were $107.9 million in the fourth quarter. This compares to expenses of $107.1 million in the third quarter. The increase was primarily due to higher medical costs that are not expected to repeat. For the full year of 2024, expenses were well managed. Normalized expenses were $426 million after adjusting for one-time extraordinary expenses of $3.1 million, an increase of just 1.7% from 2023 normalized expenses. Expenses will continue to be a focus in 2025 with core expenses projected to increase 1% to 2% from 2024. In addition, we've allocated an additional 1% of expenses to invest in revenue enhancing initiatives. Thus the total expenses are expected to increase 2% to 3% from 2024. As a reminder, the first quarter's expenses will include the seasonal bump in benefits and payroll taxes from the payment of incentives [investing in] (ph) restricted stock, currently estimated at $2.5 million. To summarize the remainder of our financial performance, in the fourth quarter, net income was $39.2 million and earnings per common share was $0.85. Our return on common equity was 10.3%. Adjusting for the previously mentioned Visa conversion ratio change, earnings per common share was $0.90 and return on common equity was 10.9%. We recorded a provision for credit losses of $3.8 million this quarter. The effective tax-rate for the fourth quarter was 24% and the tax-rate on the full-year of 2024 was 24.19%. The effective tax-rate in 2025 is expected to be approximately 24%. We continue to maintain healthy excesses above regulatory minimum well capitalized requirements. Our Tier-1 capital ratio was 13.95% and total capital ratio was 15%. Our risk-weighted assets to total assets ratio continued to be well below peer median, reflecting the low-risk nature of our asset mix. During the fourth quarter, we paid out $28 million to common shareholders in dividends and $5.3 million in preferred stock dividends. As a reminder, the dividends paid on the Series B preferred shares in the fourth quarter was a full quarter's distribution, an increase of $1.8 million from the third quarter's partial quarter amount. 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 first quarter of 2025. I'll turn the call back over to Peter.