Thanks, Gary and good morning. Today, I will focus on the second quarter's financial results and walk through our Q3 and full year guidance. As Vince mentioned, total loans and leases ended the quarter $33.8 billion, a linked-quarter increase of $1.2 billion or 3. 6%. This growth included $633 million in consumer loans driven by the seasonal peak of residential mortgage originations and $540 million in commercial loans and leases reflecting healthy activity in C&I and equipment finance as well as additional growth from fundings on previously committed commercial real estate projects. Total deposits ended the quarter at $35 billion an increase of $259 million linked-quarter, including growth in security deposits of $202 million and non-interest bearing deposits of $80 million as the seasonal build and public funds deposits has begun. The loan to deposit ratio increased to 96% at June 30th, compared to 94% at March 31st. We expect this ratio to decline in the medium-term, both organically and with several initiatives our team has implemented. Starting on the loan side of the equation, the second quarter's robust loan growth was higher than forecasted due to the seasonality of our mortgage business and stronger commercial client acquisition across the footprint. We expect loan growth to return to historical levels for the remainder of the year as pipelines have declined somewhat given the strong production in the quarter and the typical pause in client activity leading up to the presidential election. Looking at deposits, we currently have several deposit gathering initiatives targeting both commercial and consumer balances, including a strong treasury management pipeline and a new 5 month CD consumer money market promotion. Given the short duration of these promotions, we should be able to quickly reprice them lower when rates fall. Over the past year, our deposit growth and mix has outperformed the industry and we believe that will continue. This past quarter, we largely utilized short-term borrowings to fund the robust loan growth, with total borrowings increasing $1.4 billion. When rates start to decrease, the cost of these borrowings will move down quickly. As Vince mentioned, over the last several quarters, we have been strategically positioning our balance sheet to be more neutral to benefit from lower interest rates. We have$ 4.5 billion of short-term or floating rate borrowings, around $4 billion of non-maturity deposits that are currently priced at or above 4.75%. A $6.9 billion CD portfolio with a nine-month duration. And lastly, as I mentioned on last quarter's earnings call, we have around $1 billion of swaps that mature beginning in 2025 with rates between 75 and 100 basis points. Additionally, the investment portfolio has an annual cash flow of $850 million at a current roll-off yield of $250 million. And we have approximately $2.6 billion of fixed-rate loan repayments at an average rate of 4.5% in the next 12 months. In total, we have over $16 billion of liabilities in swaps, nearly $3.5 billion of securities cash flows and fixed-rate loan repayments that should provide significant benefit and protection in a falling-rate environment compared to the $16 billion of loans that we priced within three months. The second quarter's net interest margin was 3.09%, 9 basis points decreased largely due to the increased short-term borrowings, driving a 13 basis point increase in the total cost of funds to 2.46%. This is partial offset by a three basis point increase in the total yield on earning assets for 5.43%. Our spot deposit cost ended the quarter at 2.13%, leading to a total cumulative spot deposit beta of 38% since the current interest rate increases began in March of 2022, positioning us well against our competitors. Net interest income totaled $315.9 million, $3.1 million decrease from the prior quarter as the higher cost of funds was partially offset by higher loan balances with new origination yields for the quarter around 7% consistent level since the third quarter of 2023. We expect the second quarter's net interest income to be the trough for the year and should see modest sequential improvement in the third and fourth quarter. Turning to non-interest income and expense. Non-interest income totaled $87.9 million, consistent with the prior quarter's strong result. The largest quarterly increase was $2.8 million in service charges, driven by treasury management revenues continuing to gain momentum and seasonally higher consumer transaction levels. Offsetting MIS growth were declined in capital markets given lower commercial customer transaction activity and lower mortgage banking operations income driven by a slight decline in sole loan volume and net fair value adjustments from pipeline hedging activity. Operating non-interest expenses were well managed until $225.8 million, an $8.3 million decrease from the prior quarter after adjusting for $0.8 million of significant items in the current quarter and $3 million last quarter. The largest driver for the decline was salaries and employee benefits which decreased $8.2 million, primarily due to normal seasonal long-term compensation expense, $6.9 million, and seasonally higher employer paid payroll taxes in the prior quarter. Efficiency ratio remained at a pure leading level coming in at 54.4% second quarter. FNB's capital position remained strong as we were able to support robust loan growth and maintain the tangible common equity ratio near 8% and CET1 ratio at 10.2%, both of which remain above our stated operating levels. Tangible book value per common share was $9.88 at June 30, an increase of $1.09 or 12.4% compared to June 30, 2023. AOCI reduced tangible book value per common share by $0.67 as of quarter end compared to $0.99 at the end of the second quarter of last year. Let's now look at guidance for the third quarter and full year of 2024. We are maintaining our full year balance sheet guidance. Loans are expected to grow mid-single digits on a full year basis. Total deposits are expected to grow low single digits on a year-over-year basis. Our mix of non-interest bearing deposits to total deposits is anticipated to remain superior to peers. Our projected full year net interest income expectation is revised to be between $1.27 billion and $1.29 billion assuming 125 basis point rate cut in September. This revision reflects our interest bearing liability mix as we enter the second half of the year. Net interest income for the third quarter is expected to be between $315 million and $325 million. Given the strength of our non-interest income generation in the first half of the year, we have increased our full year guide to be between $350 million and $355 million. Third quarter non-interest income is expected to be between $85 million and $90 million. We now anticipate the full year guidance for non-interest expense to be between $900 million and $915 million due to production related compensation given the strong fee income results. Third quarter non-interest expense is expected to be between $220 million and $230 million. The full year provision guidance range is lowered to $75 million to $95 million and remains dependent on net loan growth and charge-off activity in the second half of the year. Lastly, the full year effective tax rate should be between 21% and 22%, which does not assume any investment tax credit activity that may occur. With that, I will turn the call back to Vince.