Bradley S. Satenberg
Thanks, Brad. For the quarter, we reported net income of $53.3 million and a diluted EPS of $1.20 per share. An increase of $5.7 million and $0.14 per share compared to the linked quarter. These increases were primarily driven by the continued expansion of our net interest income and net interest margin, which grew by $7 million and seven basis points, respectively. The expansion in both our NII and NIM was driven by the combination of fixed asset repricing which added $3.3 million for NII as well as growth in the average balance of our deposits and the successful repricing of our CD book. Partially offsetting these benefits was the deposit mix shift. During the third quarter, the mix shift was $104 million and had an $800,000 negative impact on our NII. The average mix shift during the first three quarters of this year declined by $350 million to $67 million per quarter compared to $417 million per quarter for the same period last year. During the quarter, the yield on our interest-earning assets increased by seven basis points, benefiting from an improvement in the yield on both our loan portfolio and securities portfolio. At the same time, the cost of our interest-bearing liabilities declined by two basis points driven by a modest decline in the cost of our deposits, which decreased to 159 basis points. The average cost was inflated during the quarter due to several large transitory high-cost deposits. The spot rate on our deposits was 154 basis points or five basis points lower than the average during the period. Our beta at the end of the quarter was 28%, and I believe that we will ultimately achieve a 35% beta after Fed funds hits a terminal rate. The repricing of our CD book will lag our non-maturity deposits. During the quarter, the average cost of our deposits declined by 12 basis points and I expect that the vast majority of our CDs will continue to reprice down. During the next three months, over 52% of our CDs will mature at an average rate of 3.5% and will generally renew into new CDs at rates ranging from 2.5% to 3%. The spot rate on our CD book at the end of the quarter was 3.32% or eight basis points lower than our average during the quarter. We also repositioned our interest rate swap portfolio by terminating a billion dollars of swaps that were scheduled to mature in 2026. Half of these swaps hedged our loans, while the other half hedged our AFS securities. In addition, we added $100 million spot starting swap as well as $100 million forward starting swap. As a result of these actions, we finished the quarter with a pay-fixed, receive-float interest rate swap portfolio of $1.4 billion with a weighted average fixed rate of 3.56%. Down 41 basis points from the linked quarter. $1.1 billion of these swaps are hedging our loan portfolio, while $300 million are hedging our securities. In addition, we had $600 million of forward starting swaps at a weighted average fixed rate of 3.1% at the September. $100 million of the forward swaps became active in early October, while the remaining $500 million will become active in 2026. As a result of the repositioning, our fixed to float ratio migrated up from 55% to 57% during the quarter. We are currently forecasting two additional 25 basis point rate cuts this year and anticipate that each cut will initially reduce our NII by approximately $300,000 but that the impact will ultimately turn positive after our CD book reprices and result in an estimated positive contribution of $1.6 million to our quarterly NII. Non-interest income increased to $46 million during the quarter compared to $44.8 million in the linked quarter. Non-interest income in the third quarter included a $780,000 charge related to a Visa B conversion ratio change, while the linked quarter included a one-time gain of approximately $800,000 related to a BOLI recovery. Adjusting for these normalizing items, non-interest income increased by $2.8 million primarily due to higher customer derivative activity, trust and asset management earnings, and elevated loan fees. My expectation is that fourth-quarter normalized non-interest income will be between $42 million and $43 million. Non-interest expense was $112.4 million compared to $110.8 million during the prior quarter. Included in non-interest expense this quarter was a severance-related charge of $2.1 million, the linked quarter included a severance charge of $1.4 million. Excluding the impact of these items, non-interest expense increased by $900,000 compared to the prior quarter. This change was primarily due to one additional payday during the quarter. Compared to my previous forecast, actual normalized non-interest expense was higher than expected, due to additional incentives that were recorded during the period. I expect that our fourth-quarter normalized non-interest expense to be approximately $109 million. Included within my fourth-quarter forecast for both non-interest income and non-interest expense is the impact from the sale of our merchant services business which closed earlier this month. The sale resulted in a gain of approximately $18 million that was substantially offset by a repositioning of our AFS securities portfolio. The repositioning will increase our quarterly NII by approximately $1.7 million and encompass the sale of $200 million of low-yielding securities that were replaced with new securities at higher current rates. The spread improvement on these newly acquired securities was approximately 335 basis points. The sale of the merchant services business is also expected to decrease our quarterly non-interest income and non-interest expense by approximately $3 million and $2.2 million respectively. Combining the impact from the Merchant Services sale along with the securities repositioning, the total quarterly improvement to pretax earnings will be approximately $1 million or $0.02 per share. During the quarter, we also recorded a provision for credit losses of $2.5 million down from $3.3 million during the linked quarter. Further, we reported a provision for taxes of $14.4 million during the quarter, resulting in an effective tax rate of 21.3%. I expect the tax rate for the full year to be between 21 and 21.5%. Our capital ratios remained above the well-capitalized regulatory thresholds during the quarter with Tier one capital and total risk-based capital improving to 14.3% and 15.4%, respectively. And consistent with the linked quarter, we paid dividends of $28 million on our common stock and $5.3 million on our preferreds. We did not repurchase any common shares during the quarter, under our repurchase program. As a reminder, $126 million remains available under the current plan. And finally, our Board declared a dividend of $0.70 per common share that will be paid during 2025. Now I'll turn the call back over to Peter.