Thank you, Bryan. Good morning, everyone. Turning to Slide 6. We have the highlights on our adjusted financials and key performance metrics for the quarter. As interest rates have risen over the past year, our net interest margin has expanded significantly up, 64 basis points. Despite some moderation this quarter, the margin continues to be very strong at 3.38% and our balance sheet remains asset-sensitive. Adjusted fee income and expenses were both essentially flat to the prior quarter after netting the offsetting impact of deferred compensation. Credit quality continues to remain very strong. Provision expense this quarter was $50 million, resulting in an ACL coverage ratio of 1.35% flat to the prior quarter. Tangible book value per share of $11.50 is up $0.61. The Series G conversion added $0.50, the merger termination fee added $0.23 after netting out the $50 million foundation contribution. Adjusted earnings added $0.39 partially offset by our common dividend of $0.15. The mark-to-market on the securities portfolio and hedges drove a $0.27 reduction. On Slide 7, we outlined the notable items in the quarter, which netted $98 million after-tax impact or $0.17 per share. Our pre-tax notable items include the merger termination fee of $225 million. Merger-related expenses of $30 million, primarily related to the employee retention awards which remain in place following the termination. Other notable items include a $50 million contribution to the First Horizon Foundation, as well as the $15 million derivative valuation adjustment related to prior class, Visa Class-B sales. On Slide 8, you can see that over the last year, we've benefited from our asset-sensitive position with the net interest margin expanding 64 basis points year-over-year. The positive response from clients to our deposit campaign this quarter exceeded our expectations. We brought in $5.8 billion of new-to-bank funds from the more than 50,000 customers, which brings our ending deposit balances up 3% year-to-date. The positive deposit momentum modestly accelerated the timing of the increase in deposit betas. However, our net interest margin of 3.38% continues to be very strong, despite some moderation in the quarter. As marginal funding costs have risen, loan spreads have also widened out with new production spreads approximately 50 basis points higher than we were seeing in the fourth quarter. On Slide 9, you can see the success of our deposit campaign, demonstrating the confidence our clients have in our franchise. We grew period-end deposits by 6% added over 32,000 new clients to the bank and deepened relationships with almost 19,000 of our existing clients. Our competitive offer and targeted client outreach generate historically strong acquisitions with 60% of balances coming from new-to-bank clients. This deposit campaign provided a great opportunity to connect with our clients. Our bankers made proactive outreach calls and the clients who took advantage of the deepening offer increased their balances with us by 37% on average. Mix shift continued into the second quarter with noninterest-bearing balances declining from pandemic highs. We are beginning to see signs of the pace of that mix shift is starting to slow down and DDA balances are stabilizing in the second half of the quarter. Noninterest-bearing balances at 29% still comprise a higher proportion of total deposits today than pre-pandemic which was 27%. Like a lot of banks, we saw clients looking to maximize coverage on their deposits, driving higher utilization of our collateralized repo suite product. In addition to the $4 billion of deposit growth, we added $782 million of repo balances which are incremental funding. On Slide 10, we show the trends in our loan portfolio, with loans up 3% on average and 4% at period-end. Growth was diversified across our markets and portfolio types. Loans to mortgage companies grew $650 million from first-quarter seasonal lows. This is a great business for us, it's our highest-yielding business line and as others have pulled back in the space, we've been able to deepen our relationships, widened spreads and negotiate for more deposit business. We also had growth in our CRE portfolio, which was primarily driven by fund-ups on existing loans, primarily in our multi-family space. We cover fee income trends on Slide 11. Overall, fee income has remained stable for several quarters, despite the macroeconomic headwinds impacting fixed-income and mortgage. We had $5 million of increases in deferred compensation, which is offset in expense. We saw $8 million of growth in other fees, partially driven by higher treasury management fees due to a decline in noninterest-bearing deposits and seasonal factors. On Slide 12, we review our expense trends. We have maintained expense discipline across the company as evidenced in our results with adjusted expenses down $1 million when you exclude the $5 million increase in deferred compensation. The advertising investments made this quarter were to support our client promotions, brand awareness initiatives, and client outreach programs. Other expenses declines include $2 million of lower fraud losses from implementation of additional security solutions, as well as lower franchise and realty tax expenses related to the disposal of properties. Turning to Slide 13, I'll cover asset quality and reserves. Credit quality continues to be strong with non-performing loans down $21 million from the prior quarter and net charge-offs remain near historic lows. We had $50 million of provision expense, resulting in a reserve build of $27 million, supporting 3% loan growth excluding loans to mortgage companies. Our allowance coverage ratio remains healthy at 1.35% flat to the prior period. If the industry experiences a credit cycle, we expect our portfolio to outperform due to the benefit of operating in attractive markets, underwriting loans for all stages of the credit cycle and the granular diversification across industries and portfolio types. Turning to capital on Slide 15. Our capital position is very strong with CET1 ratio of 11.1%, up 72 basis points. The Series G conversion added 71 basis points. The termination fee added 19 basis points, net of the foundation contribution. We accretively deployed 30 basis points of capital into loans, including $60 million of lower-risk loans to mortgage companies. CET1 would still be 9.5%, well above the 7% well-capitalized threshold even adjusting for the unrealized losses in the securities portfolio On Slide 16, we've reaffirmed our full-year guidance, which remains unchanged from what we shared with you at Investor Day in early June. As we're all experiencing, there's been a lot of volatility in the market expectations for interest rates. Our current outlook is for 25 basis point rate hike in July and then rates flat through the rest of the year. The positive deposit momentum modestly accelerated the timing of the increases in deposit betas and we remain asset-sensitive. We still expect our NII guidance to be in range with what we provided at Investor Day. We continue to invest in our businesses and our expense outlook reflects the impact of those investments, as well as the remaining retention awards moving into core expenses. We are pleased with the momentum we had this quarter and are excited to continue to deliver on the strength of our franchise. To wrap up on Slide 18. We are well-positioned to capitalize on our diversified business model, highly-attractive markets and asset-sensitive balance sheet. As we continue to prudently manage capital and risk, we are committed to delivering top-quartile returns through the cycle. I am proud of the work our team has accomplished over the last few years and especially as the last few months. We have built a balance sheet that we believe in and have demonstrated our ability to execute even in challenging times. And with that, I'll give it back to Bryan.