Thank you, Brian. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I am excited to share the details behind another great quarter for First Horizon. Getting started on Slide five, with some of our key performance metrics. We generated an adjusted earnings per share of $0.51, a $0.06 increase from last quarter. This earnings growth increased our adjusted return on tangible common equity by 135 basis points to 15%. Moving ahead to Slide seven, we cover our $33 million of net interest income growth and the 15 basis point expansion of net interest margin. NII growth benefited from average loan balance growth, including our high-yielding mortgage warehouse business, which contributed to a 14 basis point expansion of total loan yield and drove margin expansion to 3.55%. NII and NIM this quarter also benefited from the recognition of interest income associated with increased accretion related to the Main Street lending program. This impact is primarily concentrated in the third quarter. On Slide eight, we provide more information about our deposit performance in the quarter. Period-end balances decreased by $52 million compared to the prior quarter, driven by a $652 million decrease in brokered CDs, offset by growth in index and promotional deposits, which reflect loans to mortgage company seasonality. We did see growth within noninterest-bearing deposits as period-end balances were up $131 million. Retention continues to be a highlight for our deposit story as we retained approximately 97% of the $29 billion in balances associated with clients who had a repricing event in the quarter while continuing to reduce our costs on those deposits even in a flat rate environment. For deposit pricing overall, the average rate paid on interest-bearing deposits increased to 2.78%, up from the second quarter average of 2.76%. Our objective is to achieve consistent betas through the cycle as the rate environment evolves. Please keep in mind that there is a delay between Fed rate moves and deposit rate adjustments as we work through client repricing. On slide nine, we cover our loan portfolio performance. Period-end loans were down slightly from the prior quarter. Loans to mortgage companies decreased $132 million during the third quarter, which is in line with our normal seasonality that peaks in the middle of the summer. This portfolio continues to be roughly three-fourths purchase transactions versus refinances. To the extent that mortgage rates decline in a falling rate environment, refinance activity could pick up. We saw growth again this quarter in our C&I portfolio with period-end balances up $174 million quarter over quarter. We continue seeing CRE balances decline in line with the longer-term pattern we have seen of stabilized projects moving into the permanent markets. Importantly, we remain focused on growing higher profitability relationships, see this in relationship depth with our clients and yields in our loan portfolio with spreads from the mid-100 basis points to the upper 200 basis point range. This overall growth pattern is consistent with our expectations for average loan balance growth in 2025. On Slide 10, we detail our fee income performance for the quarter, which increased $26 million from the prior quarter, excluding deferred compensation. As improved business conditions led to increased customer activity for FHN Financial. We saw ADR increase to $771,000 and drive fixed income fee revenues of $57 million. Mortgage fees increased by $6 million, driven by an MSR sale during the quarter. On Slide 11, we highlight that excluding deferred compensation, adjusted expenses increased $45 million from the prior quarter. Personnel expenses, excluding deferred compensation, increased by $9 million from last quarter, driven by $6 million in incentives and commissions, growth on the improved ADRs. Outside services increased by $8 million, with the largest driver being project expenses and technology and risk, partially offset by declines in advertising as prior quarter campaign costs moved to new account promotion payouts within other expenses. Expenses this quarter reflect a contribution of $20 million to the First Horizon Foundation. This higher amount for the contribution we typically make to our foundation maximizes the relative tax advantages available for contributions made in 2025. Turning to credit on Slide 12. Net charge-offs decreased by $7 million to $26 million. Our net charge-off ratio of 17 basis points is in line with our expectations for the year. Loan loss provision was a credit of $5 million this quarter. This resulted from loan payoffs, and the ACL to loans ratio declined to 1.38% as we saw criticized and classified loans decline and balances grow in lower-risk categories. Our two basis point increase to NPLs is relatively flat. We feel confident in continuing long-term credit trends and success in problem loan workouts. On slide 13, we ended the quarter with CET1 of 11%, which is flat quarter over quarter. When we completed our annual stress testing during the quarter, we noted that our updated near-term target will be 10.75%, and we intend to make progress towards this target in the coming quarters. With loan balance declining in the quarter, our share buybacks accelerated to $190 million, with approximately 8.6 million shares repurchased. We have more than $300 million in remaining buyback authorization for our current program. On Slide 14, we take another look at our full-year 2025 guidance. We remain confident in achieving year-over-year PPNR growth. We maintain our revenue guidance. The NII benefit this quarter discussed earlier in counter-cyclical fee income from FHN Financial provided offset to the asset sensitivity of our balance sheet in this falling rate environment. With a significant foundation contribution noted earlier, our expense guidance remains unchanged. And the potential for increased commissions driven by ADR growth, as that business has accelerated in the third quarter, we currently expect that expenses may finish 2025 at the top end of our current guidance range. As we noted in our stress testing press release, in the near term, we are targeting 10.75% CET1, as we continue progressing towards our long-term normalized CET1 targets. Our outlook for charge-offs and taxes remains unchanged as we close out the year. I will wrap up on Slide 15. We are proud of our performance, our 15% adjusted ROC this quarter, and to see our countercyclical business model support profitability as we enter a declining rate environment. Through continued capital normalization, the value generated by our credit culture and performance, and most importantly, our ability to execute on creating value through efficiency and revenue enhancements like those aligned with our $100 million plus PPNR opportunities, we are confident in our ability to hit our near and long-term targets. Our target for the coming year remains achieving a sustainable 15% plus adjusted ROTCE. And with that, I will give it back to Brian.