Thank you, Bryan. Good morning, everyone. Turning to slide seven, we provide adjusted financials and key performance metrics for the quarter. We generated PPNR of $318 million down modestly from second quarter. The main driver was a $26 million decline in net interest income driven by higher deposit costs. Fees and expenses are relatively stable to the prior quarter. As Bryan already mentioned, we experienced an idiosyncratic credit loss of $72 million, which drove the $60 million increase in provision expense to $110 million in the quarter. This single credit impacted adjusted earnings per share by approximately $0.10. Other charge-offs of $23 million were in line with the prior quarters. Tangible book value per share came in at $11.22, with adjusted earnings per share of $0.27, partially offsetting the $0.41 impact of higher marks on securities and hedges and $0.15 of dividends. On slide eight, we outline a couple of notable items in the quarter which reduced our results by $0.04 per quarter. Third quarter notable items include a pre-tax restructuring expense of $10 million related to streamlining our market structure in addition to some reductions in force primarily within mortgage as we continue to look at operational efficiencies within our businesses to offset increasing costs. In addition to the tax impact of the restructuring, there are two notable tax items. A 24 million tax liability related to the book value surrender of approximately 214 million of separate accountable. This was triggered by the Fitch downgrade of the U.S. from AAA to AA+, which caused noncompliance with the underlying investment guidelines of the RAP [Ph] provider. Lower corporate tax rates and higher interest rates made a surrender of the policy the most attractive option to exit this low yielding asset and redeploy the cash into higher yielding and more liquid alternatives. Partially offsetting this is an $11 million of tax benefits primarily related to amended returns on prior acquisitions. On slide nine, I will walk through net interest income and margin. NII of $609 million and net interest margin of 3.17 remains strong despite moderating from cyclical highs. Interest bearing deposit costs increased 81 basis points, partially driven by a full quarter impact of the second quarter deposit campaign. Offsetting this increase was a partial quarter benefit of the July rate hike on floating rate assets as we remain asset sensitive. In fourth quarter, we will have the opportunity to reprice the promotional money market accounts acquired in second quarter, as well as the full benefit of July's rate hike, giving us the ability to improve our NII and margin from third quarter's level. The cumulative interest bearing deposit data reached 63% this quarter. We expect this to be the high watermark for us in this cycle. Our success in continuing to grow customer deposits enabled the payoff of all remaining FHLB borrowings this quarter. Over time, margin will also benefit from the continued repricing of fixed rate cash flows and widening credit spread. As two thirds of our loan portfolio is floating rate, we remain well positioned to benefit in a rising rate environment. As you can see on slide 10, we're still seeing strong inflows from our deposit campaign. Period end deposits were up 2.4% from last quarter, demonstrating our ability to expand market share. As the Fed's H8 data shows, deposits essentially flat for the industry as a whole. Deposit growth was driven by new customer acquisitions and deepening existing relationships. We opened over 19,000 new to bank deposit accounts, bringing over 1 billion, including approximately 400 million of checking account balances. The average rate on our new customer deposits was 4.2% down over 100 basis points from our second quarter promotional rate. Additionally, the customers we brought in during last quarter's promotion increased their balances by approximately 200 million. The full quarter impact of the successful deposit campaign and a higher Fed funds rate drove an increase in interest bearing deposit costs from 255 in Q2 to 336 in Q3. With our strong liquidity position, our focus is on primacy. We are launching a promotional cash offer for checking accounts that meet primacy benchmarks over time. For customers acquired in second quarter, the rate guarantees on money markets will come up for repricing in the back half of the fourth quarter. We will have the opportunity to moderate funding costs as we focus on converting from promo to primacy. On slide 11, you'll see that period end loans of $61.8 million were up $483 million or 1% linked quarter. Loans to mortgage companies declined $454 million due to seasonality and the impact on volumes from higher mortgage rates. Loan growth was diversified across our markets and portfolios. C&I growth was diversified across multiple industries, geographies, and lines of businesses. CRE growth was largely driven by fund ups from existing loans, primarily in multifamily, while commitments remained flat. We have focused our on-balance sheet mortgage production on the medical doctor program, with over 60% of new balances coming through that channel this quarter. This has been an attractive vertical for us as we can deepen these relationships with wealth management and other products. Our bankers are focused on expanding spreads and deepening relationships through increased cross-sell depository, treasury, and wealth management products. Spreads on new funding have increased almost 30 basis points since last quarter and approximately 60 basis points year-over-year. I will cover fee income trends on slide 12. Fee income is stable at $173 million versus $175 million in the prior quarter. However, excluding deferred compensation, fee income increased by $6 million. Other non-interest income was up $8 million, including an increase of $5 million in FHLB dividends from higher borrowing levels last quarter and a $1 million increase in swap fees. Again, I'll reiterate we have paid off all of our FHLB borrowings in Q3 with a new-to-bank customer deposit. Our counter-cyclical fee businesses are stabilizing near the cyclical lows. We saw a modest decrease of $2 million in fixed income with average daily revenues down due to the challenging market conditions. Mortgage banking income was up $1 million as we slightly modified our pricing strategy to drive volume into the secondary market. Moving on to expenses on slide 13. Excluding deferred compensation, adjusted expenses are up $12 million. This is largely driven by the $11 million of merger-related retention expenses moving into core results this quarter. Personnel expenses declined 2% or $4 million, and there are a couple different moving parts. First, deferred compensation declined by $8 million, which is offset in the corresponding fee income line. Second, as I previously mentioned, the geography change of the $11 million of merger-related retention expense moving into core results. Lastly, we had an $8 million reduction in other variable compensation. Other expenses were up $7 million as the prior quarter included the benefit of a few discrete non-recurring items, which included lower franchise and realty taxes. With a challenging economic environment, expense discipline remains a focus, and we continue to look for operational efficiencies within our business. This quarter, we restructured our regional bank by consolidating into two fewer regions and moderated our mortgage business. Our efficiency ratio was at 59% in Q3. I will cover asset quality and reserves on slide 14. Loan loss provision increased by $60 million from Q2 to $100 million in Q3. The increase was driven by a single C&I charge-off of $72 million. This loan was a shared national credit where we were the lead bank. We initially anticipated a recovery through a Chapter 11 bankruptcy sale. However, there was an unexpected conversion to Chapter 7 in August, at which point we charged off the full amount of the loan. We did not have a specific reserve for this credit as we had an updated third-party valuation that supported our carrying value, and we anticipated an imminent sale within the quarter. We are working with outside counsel to identify, evaluate, and pursue potential recoveries. At this time, we have no estimate of the timing or ultimate amount of recoveries, if any. Total charge-offs were $95 million in Q3. Excluding the idiosyncratic loss, charge-offs would have been $23 million in line with the prior quarter. ACL coverage ratio increased one basis point to 1.36, reflecting loan growth and continued caution around the macroeconomic outlook. The vacancy rate in our office CRE portfolio is 11%, which compares favorably to the industry, which is experiencing vacancy of 19% in the Southeast. Like others, we are seeing credit normalized from historically low loss levels during the pandemic. Though, credit can be variable, we do not expect significant broad-based deterioration in our portfolios. On slide 15, you can see that we continue to have exceptionally strong capital levels. Our CET1 ratio of 11.1% remained flat to the prior quarter, even as we organically deployed capital to loan growth. Even after adjusting for the marks on our security portfolio and loan book, our pro forma CET1 ratio would be 8.6%. Tangible book value per share was $11.22 in Q3, a slight decrease from the prior quarter due to a $0.41 reduction from higher mark-to-mark impacts that were partially offset by $0.29 of adjusted NIAC. Total capital also remained very strong at 13.6%. On slide 16, we have made a couple of tweaks to our outlook, though we continue to believe that PPNR will be within the guidance we gave at Investor Day in June. We updated our loan growth expectations from 3% to 5% to 7% to 9%, as our success in raising deposits has enabled us to organically deploy excess capital into meeting our clients' borrowing needs and strategically acquiring new clients. The net charge-off outlook is updated to include this quarter's idiosyncratic loss, but we expect other charge-offs to be within prior guidance. The new capital range, RWA [Ph] impact of the updated loan guidance. This assumes no share buybacks, but as Bryan mentioned, we intend to evaluate capital deployment as we head into 2024. To wrap up on slide 17, I am very proud of how this team navigated 2023 so far with passion and commitment to our clients, despite the macroeconomic environment and the unique challenges we have faced. Our success in client retention and acquisition would not be possible without the consistent focus of our associates that they have on serving our clients through any cycle or challenge. We are well-positioned to capitalize on the opportunities of our diversified business model, highly attractive franchise, and asset-sensitive balance sheet. We are making strategic investments to support clients with products, services, and technology upgrades that will result in improved efficiency. We will continue to look for operational efficiencies to offset our investments. We remain committed to delivering attractive returns for shareholders through the cycle. Now, I will hand it back to Bryan.