Thank you, Dan. I would like to start by making a few brief comments on the pro forma financial impact and expected uses of proceeds on the Cadence Insurance transaction which is highlighted on Slides 5 through 7. The financial metrics of this transaction are extremely attractive. We estimate that the transaction will result in additional capital of approximately $620 million, including a net book gain of approximately $520 million which represents approximately 160 basis points of additional CET1 and 24% tangible book value accretion. Further, we estimate the transaction to be net neutral to earnings by simply applying the cash proceeds towards the paydown of wholesale funds before any use of the generated capital. Referencing Slide 7, upon completion of the sale, in addition to the paydown of borrowings, we anticipate executing on a securities repositioning of at least $1.5 billion of the securities portfolio, whereby we would use a portion of the generated capital to sell securities yielding under 1.2% and use the proceeds to reinvest in earning assets at market value rates likely with higher building securities. The pro forma earnings and margin impact of these actions are impressive. Using consensus estimates for 2024, we estimate EPS accretion of 11% and incremental net interest margin pickup of over 20 basis points and an improvement in the efficiency ratio of 530 basis points. After factoring in an estimate of the related loss associated with the sold securities, the pro forma net impact to our CET1 is still nearly 120 basis points. We also anticipate both the gain from the insurance transaction and a subsequent loss from the securities sales to occur in the same reporting period in support of efficient tax management. On the remaining generated capital, we ultimately aim to maintain capital strength and flexibility, whether it be in additional securities, portfolio restructuring, share buyback or various other forms of future growth. If I sound excited, I am. This is a unique opportunity that we believe has meaningful shareholder value. Moving on to our financial results for the quarter. Looking at our balance sheet and margin highlights beginning on Slide 18. We reported net interest income of $329 million for the third quarter, a decline of $4.5 million compared to the second quarter of 2023. Our net interest margin was 2.98% for the third quarter, down 5 basis points from our second quarter margin of 3.3%. Our total cost of deposits increased to 2.14%, up 27 basis points from the second quarter which is roughly half of the increase we experienced in each of the first 2 quarters of the year. While it's clearly still very competitive, pressure on deposit balances and pricing seems to have moderated over the last several months. We also saw a reduction in the pace of migration from noninterest-bearing products to interest-bearing products. Noninterest-bearing balances represented 25.2% of total deposits at the end of the third quarter compared to 26.4% at the end of the second quarter. Our yield on net loans, excluding accretion, was 6.31% for the third quarter, up 13 basis points from the prior quarter as slowing in new originations contributed to a reduction in the pace of loan yield increases compared to prior quarters. Noninterest revenue highlighted on Slide 21 was $119 million on a reported basis. Excluding $6.7 million in facility and signage write-downs associated with the branch closures during the third quarter which is reflected in the other income line item. Total adjusted noninterest revenue was $125.6 million, a $6.6 million decline in the prior quarter. About half of this decline was driven by mortgage banking income, with the remainder being driven by a combination of other revenue sources, including credit-related fees and brokerage income. Mortgage banking production and servicing declined by $1 million, primarily as a result of slowed purchase activity. Additionally, the MSR asset adjustment was a negative $0.2 million for the third quarter compared with a positive $1.6 million for the second quarter. Moving on to expenses which are highlighted on Slides 22 and 23. Total adjusted noninterest expense was $301 million for the quarter, reflecting stability across most of the major expense categories. Salaries and employee benefits increased $1.3 million compared to the second quarter as the headcount declines that Dan mentioned earlier, allowed us to stay relatively flat on compensation expense despite the July 1st effective date for annual merit increases. We reported a $2.7 million increase in deposit insurance assessment expense which was driven by an increase in uninsured deposits, higher second quarter loan balances and changes in certain of the credit quality metrics that impact the assessment. Dan spoke to the progress on our efficiency initiatives but to briefly recap, we expect our total FTE to be down by over 480 since the end of last year or an 8% reduction excluding insurance. We also closed 35 branches in the third quarter, reducing our total branch count by 12% since merger. And of course, all of this is before factoring in the impact of the pending sale of the insurance company. We believe the combination of these and other efforts will provide a meaningful positive impact on our performance and efficiency. Finally, speaking to credit quality on Slide 16. Dan addressed most of this provision for the quarter was $17 million, up slightly from the $15 million provision in the second quarter of this year. Net charge-offs increased to $34.2 million in the third quarter or 0.42% of average loans on an annualized basis, primarily due to 2 credits that were identified as impaired and reserved for in prior quarters, as Dan mentioned. Our nonperforming loans and nonperforming asset totals were stable linked quarter at 0.49% of loans and 0.33% of assets, respectively. Our criticized loan totals were also stable compared to the second quarter, while our classified loans increased slightly to 2.10% of total loans. We saw some migration from special mention to substandard, primarily the result of higher interest rates and inflationary pressures on loan rates. We continue to monitor credit quality very closely while higher rates and other macro factors have clearly impacted certain borrowers, our near-term outlook on credit remains stable. Our allowance coverage is solid at 1.37% and we continue to appreciate the diversification of our loan book, both in type and geography. In closing, I can't help but use the word excited again because we simply are. It has been nice to see the stabilization in our balance sheet and margin this quarter, highlighting the value of our core deposit franchise and our efficiency initiatives are progressing as planned. Finally and importantly, the pending insurance sale transaction is a transformative step in our efforts to improve our performance and enhance shareholder value. Operator, we would now like to open the call to questions.