Thomas J. Bell
Thank you, Alberto, and good morning, everyone. Starting with our loans on Slide five. Total loans increased $107 million or 6% annualized and were $7.5 billion at September 30. As Alberto mentioned, origination activity was solid for the quarter with $264 million in new loans, up 25% compared to a year ago. Payoff activity decreased $41 million from Q2 and stood at $205 million. Loan commitments grew, and draw activity added to the loan growth for the quarter, even as line utilization remained relatively flat at 59%. As we look ahead for Q4, we expect loan growth to continue in the mid-single digits. I would like to note that our loan growth could be impacted somewhat by the higher government loan impact somewhat higher by the government shutdown that goes into effect maybe in 2026. As a result, our government-guaranteed loan originations will remain on balance sheet until the government is reopened. Turning to Slide six. Total deposits were $7.8 billion for the quarter, up slightly from the prior quarter. The uptick in deposits was due to non-interest-bearing accounts increasing $160 million or 9% linked quarter, which was driven by seasonality in deposits. This was offset by decreases in time deposits driven by lower brokered CDs and CDs shifting into money market accounts. We saw continued improvement in the mix, which drove deposit costs lower by 11 basis points to 2.16%. Turning to Slide seven. We had record net interest income of $99.9 million in Q3, up 4.1% from the prior quarter, primarily due to organic loan growth and lower rates paid on deposits. This was offset by higher interest expense related to refinancing of the $75 million of sub debt this quarter, which contributed a seven basis point drag on NIM. The net interest margin grew to 4.27%, up nine basis points linked quarter. And year over year, NIM expanded 39 basis points. Specifically, we saw lower interest expense on deposits and higher rates on earning assets. As a reminder, our SBA loans reset on a quarterly lag. As a result, the mid-September rate cut is effective October 1. With the market expectations of two Fed cuts in the fourth quarter, we expect net interest income of $97 million to $99 million. I would note that earning asset growth and disciplined pricing have generated growing NII in this declining rate environment. Turning to Slide eight. Noninterest income totaled $15.9 million in the third quarter, up 9.5% from the last quarter, primarily due to a $7 million gain in sale on loans sold driven by higher volumes. The SBA loan pipeline is solid. However, due to the government shutdown, we are currently unable to sell and settle loans in the secondary market. Timing will determine the impact of our gain on sale income for Q4. As a result, we will not be providing gain on sale guidance for the fourth quarter. Turning to Slide nine. Our noninterest expense came in at $60.5 million, up 1.5% from the prior quarter. The increase reflects higher salary employee benefits, including a $2 million in higher incentive compensation accruals due to higher performance. A $1.5 million increase in noninterest expense, which includes $843,000 of remaining expense associated with the call sub debt. These were partially offset by merger-related and secondary public offering expenses recorded in the second quarter. Our efficiency ratio stood at 51% compared to 52.6% in the second quarter, an improvement of 161 basis points. For Q4, we expect noninterest expense in the same range as Q3 results. Turning to Slide 10. In the third quarter, we saw credit metrics improve. Our allowance for credit losses decreased slightly to $1.057 billion, representing 1.42% of total loans, down five basis points from the prior quarter. The decline was primarily due to individually assessed loan resolution in the quarter, offset by loan growth and higher adjustments to economic factors. We recorded a $5.3 million provision for credit losses in Q3, compared to $11.9 million in Q2. Net charge-offs decreased to $7.1 million compared to $7.7 million in the previous quarter. NPLs to total loans and leases decreased to 85 basis points in Q3 from 92 basis points in Q2. NPAs to total assets decreased to 69 basis points in Q3 from 75 basis points in Q2. Moving on to capital on Slide 11. This quarter, our capital increased further with CET1 at 12.15%, and tangible common equity ratio was 10.78%. We increased our tangible book value per share by $1.2, up 5% linked quarter and up 12% compared to last year. For the quarter, our total capital was 15.81%, which grew meaningfully due to the sub debt issuance. If you exclude the sub debt that was called on October 1, total capital is approximately 15.14%. With that, Alberto, back to you.