Thanks, Mike. We had a few unusual transactions in the quarter that I'd like to walk you through before I turn to our core operating results. First, as previously disclosed, and as Mike just mentioned, on June 1 we redeemed $50 million of a $100 million in subordinated debt that we had outstanding. The debt was issued at the bank level in 2018. The $50 million that we redeemed was a 10-year instrument, so the Tier 2 capital treatment was already in the phase out period and was about to lose another 20% of its capital treatment. The other $50 million that remains outstanding is a 15-year instrument and so remains eligible for 100% Tier 2 capital treatment for another four years at a fixed rate of 5.5%. The $50 million that we redeemed was floating at a rate of about 7.5% and we called it using excess cash on hand. So calling it on June 1 gave us one month of benefit in our net interest margin for the quarter. This was the perfect quarter to redeem the sub debt, since capital ratios grew strongly due to capital generation combined with limited balance sheet growth. On its own, the sub debt redemption would have resulted in a 44 basis point reduction in the total risk based capital ratio. But that ratio only went down by 8 basis points this quarter, and in fact, the tangible common equity ratio actually improved from 8.4% to 8.7% in the quarter, as did the CET1 ratio from 11.4% to 11.7%. The sub debt redemption contributed to the NIM improvement for one month in the second quarter, and going forward it should contribute about 2 basis points of NIM, in part because we used cash to pay it off and shrunk the balance sheet by $50 million. The redemption should also add about $1 million of net interest income on an annual basis. Second, we had two offsetting non-core items in the quarter. We along with approximately 98% of banks holding Visa shares expected Visa's offer to sell half our holdings, an action which we previously disclosed as well. As a result, we recognized approximately $5.6 million of gain on the stock in the second quarter, offsetting that was a sale at the very end of the quarter of $75 million in underwater securities at a $5.5 million loss. As a result, these two non-core items offset each other in terms of their effect on second quarter earnings, leaving GAAP and core EPS exactly the same for the quarter at 36%. But the net effect going forward of selling low yielding securities and in their place repurchasing securities at current market rates, should provide a 2 basis point tailwind to NIM, along with approximately $2.25 million in improved net interest income per year. Now, onto our core operating results. Notwithstanding provision expense and the non-core items mentioned above, our pre-tax pre-provision net revenue improved by $3.6 million over last quarter as the NIM expanded and fee income improved. After four quarters of NIM compression, the margin finally expanded this quarter by 5 basis points to 3.57%. Yields on earning assets improved by 12 basis points, while the cost of funds only went up by 7 basis points. The cost of deposits went up by 10 basis points, but the impact on the total cost of funds was muted by the sub debt redemption. The NIM also benefited by about 2 basis points from the recognition into net interest income of deferred interest on one loan that had previously in place on non-accrual status. Purchase accounting accretion contributed 8 basis points to the NIM this quarter, and we still expect that to fade out by about 1 basis point per quarter. The other big story with regard to the NIM this quarter was a fairly dramatic slowdown in the deposit "rotation" that we've seen in the past year. While there's no standard industry definition for that term, we use it to mean declines in balances in the traditionally low cost deposit categories of non-interest bearing now and savings accounts, and growth in the balances of the higher cost categories of money market and time deposits. In the first quarter of 2024, for example, we experienced a decline of approximately $233 million in the less expensive categories and an increase of $283 million in the more expensive categories that was the first quarter 2024. That's been the pattern for the last six quarters. Deposit rotation began in earnest in the first quarter of 2023 and has been running at roughly $200 million to $250 million in each of the last three quarters. In the second quarter just ended, however, the less expensive categories, rather than decreasing, actually increased by $27 million, while the more expensive categories only increased by $173 million. Perhaps more importantly, the deposit growth that we had in the first quarter came at an incremental cost of about 4.5%, and in the second quarter, the incremental cost on new deposit funds fell to 3.4%. That combined with the rotation slowdown are noteworthy shifts and give us increased confidence in our NIM forecast going forward. As a result of these dynamics, we would expect NIM stability or even slight improvement from current levels; the remainder of 2024 give or take 5 basis points as usual, but with a bias towards the higher end of that range even with two to three cut rate cuts. Over the long haul, we are active sensitive, but in the near-term, even with rate cuts, our loan portfolio yields will continue to drift upwards for a while before they start to fall. Most importantly, the notion that we've turned the corner to a falling rate environment should further reduce pressure on funding rates over the medium-term, which has been the hardest part to predict. When we forecast using anywhere from zero to four rate cuts for the remainder of 2024 and 2025, we get the same pattern for NIM and net interest income. Slow steady increases for the remainder of 2024, flat through the first quarter of 2025, as lower rates start to have their effect, and then a meaningful lift starting in the second quarter of next year as the macro swaps start to mature. In all of these scenarios, the quarter just ended appears to be the low point in terms of both NIM and net interest income at least through 2025, though to be clear, our forecast has certainly been wrong in the past. Higher for longer is certainly better for us, but even in an aggregate aggressive rate cut scenario where there are four cuts this year and the Fed funds rate ends 2025 at about 3%, our NIM and NII are both still higher than where they are now over the next six quarters even assuming only modest loan growth. In terms of capital management, tangible book value per share increased by $0.30 to 13% annualized from the previous quarter to $9.56 due to about $24 million in retained earnings combined with a $5.7 million reduction in AOCI, which ended the quarter at $113.4 million, or 11.6% of tangible common equity. We repurchased just under 23,000 shares this quarter at prices below $12.50 and have $17.1 million of authorization remaining in our current buyback program. Given the recent run up in our stock price, the earn back on buybacks becomes longer than we'd like. But if we continue to experience modest balance sheet growth, combined with consistent capital generation and reductions in AOCI, and especially now that the sub debt redemption is behind us, we may repurchase shares anyway simply to avoid becoming underleveraged. And with that, we'll take any questions you may have.