Good morning, everyone. As Bruce mentioned, we delivered a strong revenue performance with disciplined expense management in the quarter, driving both sequential and year-over-year positive operating leverage of about 35% respectively. We saw good growth in deposits with the private bank hitting $12.5 billion in deposits for the third quarter, up $3.8 billion. Lending continued to pick up during the quarter, with growth led by increasing sponsor activity in commercial and the private bank. Given our strong outlook, the Board of Directors declared a quarterly dividend of $0.46, which is a $0.04 or 9.5% increase. Referencing slides five and six, we delivered EPS of $1.50 for the third quarter, an increase of $0.13 or 14% over the second quarter. PPNR was up 9% sequentially and 20% year over year. Capital markets delivered a record third quarter and our best performance since the all-time high in 2021. Performance was strong across all categories, demonstrating the power of our capabilities as market activity picks up. Net interest margin continues to steadily expand, up five basis points to 3%, and average loan volume was up 1%. Which combined delivered 3.5% NII growth. Expenses were well managed and we had 3% positive operating leverage. Credit trends continue to be favorable and net charge-offs were lower as expected. We continue to maintain robust capital, strong liquidity levels, and a healthy credit reserve. We ended the quarter with our CET1 ratio at 10.7%, while executing $75 million in stock buybacks during the quarter. And importantly, are executing well against our key strategic initiatives with very strong momentum in our private bank and private wealth build-out. The private bank continues to steadily grow its earnings contribution, adding $0.08 to EPS this quarter, up from $0.06 the prior quarter. With this, the Private Bank hit an important milestone this quarter, achieving cumulative breakeven with the EPS contribution since the launch in 2023 completely covering our investments and then some. In about two years. Next, talk through the third quarter results in more detail starting with net interest income on slide seven. Net interest income increased 3.5% linked quarter driven by continued expansion of our net interest margin. And a 1% increase in average interest-earning assets. The margin expansion of five basis points was driven by the time-based benefits of non-core runoff and reduced impact from terminated swaps, as well as fixed-rate asset repricing. We continue to do a good job optimizing deposits in a competitive environment, Interest-bearing deposit costs were stable while total deposit costs were down slightly. Our cumulative interest-bearing deposit beta was 53% through the third quarter. Moving to slide eight, fees are up 5% linked quarter and up 18% year over year. As I mentioned earlier, Capital Markets delivered a record third quarter and our second-best ever quarterly performance. An increase in market activity drove strong M&A results, even before including the deals that were delayed from the prior quarter. We saw a meaningful pickup in debt underwriting primarily driven by refinance activity and we delivered a solid performance across loan syndication fees and equity underwriting. We continue to perform well in the league tables, ranking fourth for the last twelve months on deal volume, for middle market sponsored loan syndications. And our deal pipelines across M&A, debt, and equity capital markets remain strong. Wealth business delivered a record quarter with higher advisory fees from continued positive momentum in fee-based AUM growth given strong inflows from the conversion of private wealth lift-outs. As well as market appreciation. As expected, mortgage and other income came down from elevated levels in the prior quarter. On slide nine, expenses are up 1% reflecting continued investment in the build-out of private bank and private wealth. And strong capital markets performance. Disciplined expense management and strong revenues resulted in approximately 170 points of improvements in our efficiency ratio. To 63%. Our top 10 program is progressing well and is on target to deliver $100 million pre-tax run rate benefit by the end of this year. I'll provide an update on our Reimagine the Bank initiative in just a few minutes. On slide 10, period-end loans were up 1%. This includes non-core portfolio runoff of roughly $600 million in the quarter. And excluding non-core, loans were up approximately 2% on a spot basis. The private bank delivered solid loan growth again this quarter with period-end loans up about $1 billion to $5.9 billion, reflecting a pickup in commercial line utilization and growth in retail mortgage. Commercial loans were up slightly on a spot basis, given increased line utilization tied to sponsor activity. We continue to reduce CRE balances which were down about 3% this quarter and 6% year to date. And core retail loans grew by about $1 billion driven by home equity and mortgage. Next, on slides eleven and twelve, we continue to do a good job on deposits. With non-interest-bearing balances increasing by about $1.5 billion or 4%, maintaining a steady mix at 22% of the book as our overall spot deposits increased approximately $5.18 billion. Average deposits were up 1% driven by increases in the Private Bank and Commercial with spot up 3% including some larger transactional flows towards the end of the quarter. We continue to focus on optimizing our deposit funding costs with a further reduction of higher-cost treasury broker deposits this quarter and a decline in retail CD rates. Our interest-bearing deposit costs are stable linked quarter translating to a 53% cumulative down beta. And importantly, stable retail deposits are 66% of our total deposits. Which compares to a peer average of about 56%. Moving to credit on Slide 13. Net charge-offs of 46 basis points are down from 48 basis points in the prior quarter driven primarily by a decrease in C&I. Credit trends continue to trend favorably with non-accrual loans down slightly linked quarter driven by C&I and CRE with criticized balances also declining. Turning to the allowance for credit losses on slide 14. The allowance was down slightly to 1.56% this quarter as the portfolio mix continues to improve due to non-core runoff, the reduction in the CRE portfolio, lower loss content front book originations across C&I and retail real estate secured. The economic forecast supporting the allowance is relatively stable to the prior quarter. The general office balance of $2.5 billion continued to decline modestly in the third quarter driven by paydowns and charge-offs. This is down by $1.6 billion since March 2023, roughly 40%. The reserve for the general office portfolio is $314 million, which represents a robust 12.4% coverage. Moving to slide 15, we maintain excellent balance sheet strength. Our CET1 ratio increased to 10.7% and adjusting for the AOCI opt-out removal, our CET1 ratio is 9.4%. We returned a total of $259 million to shareholders in the third quarter, with $184 million in common dividends and $75 million of share repurchases. Moving to slides sixteen and seventeen, we are well positioned to drive strong performance over the medium term with our overall three-part strategy. A transformed consumer bank, the best-positioned commercial bank among our regional peers, and our aspiration to build the premier bank-owned private bank and private wealth franchise. The private bank continued to make excellent progress as you can see on slide eighteen and nineteen. The Private Bank delivered its strongest quarter of deposit growth so far with end-of-period deposits up $3.8 billion to $12.5 billion and average deposits up $2.2 billion to $10.7 billion. The overall deposit mix continues to be very attractive with about 34% in non-interest bearing at the end of the quarter. We also delivered strong loan growth this quarter adding roughly $1 billion of loans to end the quarter at $5.9 billion. This reflects growth in subscription finance, as line utilization rose with increased client transaction activity as well as good growth in mortgage. So far, we've added eight wealth teams to our platform with more in the pipeline. We ended the quarter with $7.6 billion in AUM, up $1.1 billion linked quarter. Reflecting the continued strong conversion rates of the wealth lift-outs. With year-to-date earnings of $0.18, we are tracking to approximately 7% earnings contribution, which is above our target of 5% plus accretion. To Citizens bottom line 2025. We continue to remain focused on sustaining strong growth in the private bank while maintaining a high level of profitability. With ROE in the 20% to 25% range 2025 and over the medium term. Moving to slide 20, our Reimagine the Bank initiative continues to take shape. We feel very good about how we are currently positioned. However, the pace of change is accelerating and competition is fierce. So we are taking the opportunity to think boldly about what will be needed to take the bank to the next level. We have a team of executives from across the bank working on cultivating technology and AI-enabled ideas that will empower our colleagues to run the bank better and we are looking at all our key customer touchpoints to simplify and improve customer experience. Aside from technology, we're looking at areas like reducing the number of vendors we use, and rationalizing how they serve us across the bank. We are also looking at how we use our corporate facilities, how best to optimize our branch network to build our market share in key markets. Have more details on the contours of the program for you on our year-end earnings call, but suffice to say, we will be running the program with our usual financial discipline with an eye toward minimizing the impact of one-time costs and capital investments in 2026 by executing initiatives with faster paybacks. The program will drive positive net benefits in 2027 that we expect will accelerate into 2028. With this program, we aspire to deliver fully phased-in run rate benefits greater than top six which was in excess of $400 million. On slide 21, we provide our guide for the fourth quarter which contemplates two twenty-five basis point rate cuts. One in October and another in December. We expect net interest income to be up approximately 2.5% to 3% driven by an improvement in net interest margin of approximately five basis points and interest-earning assets up slightly maintaining a fairly consistent spot LDR to the third quarter. We expect non-interest income to be stable with capital markets holding steady to the third quarter and some puts and takes across other categories. We are projecting expenses to be stable to up slightly and we expect to deliver sequential positive operating leverage for the third quarter in a row and for the full year. Credit is expected to continue to trend favorably with charge-offs in the low 40s basis points. And we should end the fourth quarter with a CET1 ratio stable at 10.7% including share repurchases of roughly $125 million which depending on the amount of loan growth could be revised. The fourth quarter tax rate should be approximately 22.5%. Moving to Slide 22, looking out to the medium term, we see a clear path to achieving our 16% to 18% ROTCE target. Expanding our net interest margin is an important driver along with the impacts of the successful execution of our strategic initiatives and improving credit performance. To wrap up, our strong third quarter results demonstrate the quality and potential of our fee businesses as well as the consistent improvement in our net interest margin. Coupled with our continued expense discipline, we achieved positive operating leverage for the second quarter in a row. Credit trends continue to improve and with our strong reserves and capital level, we are in an excellent position to continue navigating a dynamic environment. While supporting our clients, and continuing to progress our strategic initiatives. And with that, I'll hand it back over to Bruce.