All right. Thanks, Huntley and Chip. Good morning, everybody. Let's start a discussion on earnings on Slide 11 with a recap of the major drivers in Q1. And to state the obvious, this was quite a quarter for the banking industry. And for Live Oak, it was really the tale of two distinct phases, January 1 through about March 8 and March 8 through March 31. In the first phase through early March, we saw continued strong customer loan and deposit growth, continued improvement in the secondary market environment for gain on sale premiums and asset marks, good expense discipline and stable credit quality. In the second phase, post the industry panic of the SVB and Signature issues, we saw significant reversals of secondary market pricing improvement we had been experienced -- experiencing, and we took action to further ensure the safety of our customers and our balance sheet. So all of that netted to not a lot of earnings in the quarter, but actions we have taken to ensure safety and soundness, coupled with our strong customer growth, puts us on a path to much improved earnings trajectory going forward. I'll quickly hit some highlights here on Slide 11, but get into a bit more detail on each over the next several slides. Our loan production engine continues to generate profitable growth with the $1 billion in loan production in the quarter being the highest Q1 production level in the history of Live Oak at average yields of 8.54% versus current portfolio yield of 7% and driving loan growth up 4% quarter-over-quarter and 21% year-over-year. As Huntley said, deposit growth was up nicely as well. The customer deposit growth was still up almost 3% in the quarter despite the March disruption and continues to grow nicely even through April tax season. I'll get into a bit more detail on our NIM compression this quarter in a few minutes, but we'll say that while through -- while the trial of the NIM is now lower due to industry stress in March, the resiliency of our NIM and resulting net interest income in the second half of the year should be aided by the strong net loan growth, higher loan production yields we are booking and an anticipated flattening of deposit costs. Expenses are moderating as we discussed on the fourth quarter call, and we expect further discipline here throughout the rest of the year. On reserves, we leaned into the provision for both growth, which I consider good provision and conservatism given the economic environment. And finally, the impacts of those notable items, which I'll hit on the next slide, had a pretty outsized impact of about $0.20 in the quarter. Turning to Slide 12. Let's take a look at those notable items that added up to that $0.20. In noninterest income, we had 2 notable items, the largest of which was for our loans held at fair value, which are marked at the end of each quarter. Given the disruption in March, we saw a significant swing in that valuation in just 30 days. We now have roughly a 5% mark on that portfolio, over 2x our current allowance for credit loss. So this seems quite conservative. In noninterest expense, we refined our assumptions to be more conservative in how we reserve for unfunded commitments, resulting in a onetime step-up of $2.4 million. And finally, we had a discrete tax item of $2.8 million, which resulted in an abnormally high effective tax rate in the quarter, which we expect will normalize into the 15% to 20% range over the course of the year. Turning to Slide 13. Our $1 billion of loan production in the quarter was again diverse across multiple areas with particular strength in our middle-market sponsor finance vertical, solar vertical and numerous small business areas. As others pull back on lending, we expect to see good opportunities for new business going forward. Let's turn to our net interest income and margin trends on Slide 14. Given the market disruption and the decline in our NIM this quarter, I'll go through the dynamics in a bit more detail than usual. You may recall that in a response to a question on the fourth quarter earnings call about our NIM in 2023, I said that deposit pricing ramped up significantly in the back half of '22 and showed no signs of slowing. Therefore, we expected to see downward pressure on the NIM in the first half of the year because the accelerated deposit pricing would be more rapid than the loan repricing. In the back half of the year, however, as our loan repricing flowed through the balance sheet and the Fed near the end of its rate increase cycle, we would expect NIM expansion. All of those things are still true, but the March industry stress further increased deposit pricing pressures in the near term. But the loan repricing tailwinds are still to come, which should help with NIM improvement in the back half of the year. Said a different way, while we expected a V-shape to our NIM trajectory in 2023, given recent events and our desire to ensure continued customer deposit growth, the decline is steeper than we expected in the first half. However, we still anticipate steady improvement in the NIM and net interest income in the second half of '23. So let's put a few data points behind what I just said. Let's take the deposit side first. You see that we provided more information on both Live Oak and the top digital competitors as it relates to deposit pricing in betas, along with the ending Fed funds' upper rate for reference. Two things you will notice in the first half of 2022. Our quarterly and cumulative savings betas were tracking with the top digital competitors through the first half of '22. And second, it was at a lower beta, about 40% than what we have been consistently sharing with you about our expected through-the-cycle beta of about 70%. In the second half of 2022, deposit competition started to heat up significantly. Take a look at the 2 gray boxes on this slide. In the third quarter, top competitors started moving much higher at a 78% beta in Q3 '22, as you can see in the gray box. Our deposit growth trajectory, however, was still strong and fully supportive of our loan growth. So we remain disciplined about rate increases and our beta remained lower at 63%. In the fourth quarter, however, top competitors moved up at almost 100% beta. We had to move accordingly to maintain our balanced growth. And in the first quarter, we saw moderation in deposit rate movements from competitors with very little movement through mid-March. And we were growing our customer deposits on our desired pace, so we had no expectation of moving deposit rates up in Q1. When the industry crisis hit in mid-March and we saw customer outflows, we decided to move proactively and aggressively to reverse the trends we were seeing, moving savings rates up a full 50 basis points to move modestly ahead of top digital competitors. As you can see, it worked quite well to put us back on a positive customer deposit growth path. So we sit here today at a modestly higher through-the-cycle beta of about 74% versus the 70% or slightly less we had expected, but are back on track for healthy customer deposit growth to support our continued loan growth. Now let's take a look at the loan side. Here, we provided you with an additional data point, our loan production yields from Q1. I'll reference that in a minute. Our loan yields have been moving up nicely as you can see in the table, but obviously cannot move as rapidly as the deposit betas we just discussed as about 40% of our current loan portfolio is variable rate, but 2 points to make on loan yields going forward. Number one, loan production yields are currently being booked at rates greater than 150 basis points higher than our portfolio rates. See the [854] on new loan production yields in the upper right of the slide, versus the 7% on portfolio loan yields in the upper right of the table. Second, the majority of our variable rate loans are quarterly, not monthly adjusting. This means that unlike deposit rate changes, which happened intra-quarter, we don't see intra-quarter increases in loan yields. They move up the full change in the prime rate over the prior quarter on the first day of the following quarter. So as of April 1, our quarterly adjusting loans saw another 50 basis point increase in rate. Therefore, as our newer loans replace older loans over time, our portfolio yields will continue to rise, supporting stabilization, then improvement in our net spread. So what does all this mean for the NIM? And how does that relate to the 3.50% to 3.75% range that had been discussed? Pre-crisis, we would have expected NIM to bottom out in the 3.50% to 3.55% range in Q1 and to end Q4 '23 in the 3.75% to 3.80% range, resulting in a full year 2023 NIM in the 3.65% range. With the March events driving deposit costs higher than anticipated, we now expect NIM to bottom out at about 25 to 30 basis points below the prior range one quarter later in Q2 and end Q4 '23 in the lower to middle part of the 3.50% to 3.75% range. This remains an uncertain environment, so let me be crystal clear and transparent with our current assumptions here. The Fed moves 25 basis points in May, then pauses for the rest of the year. Deposit betas move in the 60% to 70% range for that increase, then flatten. Deposit growth continues on pace with the above beta assumptions. Healthy loan growth continues on pace with current pricing and no further major industry disruption related to deposits or liquidity. Remember that if we do decide to hold more on balance sheet liquidity, it may have an impact on the NIM, but will have minimal impact on net interest income. So to recap, deeper V in NIM trajectory in the first half of the year for more rapid deposit rate changes due to the industry stress events, but NIM and net interest income improvement in the back half of the year as deposit costs moderate, loan yields continue to improve and earning assets continue to grow. I hope this helps. Let's turn to Slide 15 and take a look at noninterest income trends. As I mentioned before, we have been seeing improvement in secondary market conditions, premiums and valuations before the mid-March events. Our SBA sales activity increased in Q1, as did our gain on sale premium resulting in $10 million in net gain on sale income versus $7 million in Q4. Though the majority of what we sold was variable rate, we did see some fixed rate SBA sales activity, which was encouraging. And all of our sales activity occurred before mid-March. As you can see in the upper right, from February 28 to March 31, our servicing asset reval and fair value mark was down almost $6 million or over $6 million, reversing a net gain position we had on those assets as of the end of February. While there will be continued variability as these assets are valued quarterly based on market pricing, spot rates on 3/31 were obviously heavily influenced by the events at mid-March, but we do not expect this level of volatility going forward. Turning to expenses on Slide 17. As we discussed on the fourth quarter call, we have worked through what I call our hiring bubble, first, to rightsize our lender support to accommodate the significant step-up in balance sheet growth over the past few years. And second, to accelerate our technology build-out in 2022, thanks to the Finxact gain. Going forward, while we will continue to be opportunistic on hiring for revenue producers, we are tightly managing our expense growth to improve our operating leverage. Our core expenses were essentially flat to Q4 with our headcount up only 7 people or 1%. We expect continued lower levels of hiring and strong expense discipline going forward. Turning to credit trends on Slide 18. As Chip and Huntley discussed earlier, credit metrics remain quite strong. We continue to actively monitor the existing portfolio and do not currently see any glaring weak spots. Past dues are down and nonaccruals remain quite low. You can see that the credit quality trends across our 3 business segments are quite strong as well. And about $5 million of the $6.7 million net charge-offs in the quarter were driven by 2 relationships, leaving only $1.7 million of net charge-offs across the entire rest of the $8 billion portfolio. 2 relationships is not a trend. Steve can speak more on these and the overall strength of our portfolio during Q&A. Yet the provision remained flat as we leaned into building reserves for both the new loan growth and continued caution about the future economic outlook, our reserves to unguaranteed loans remain well above the industry. And about $7 million of our $19 million provision was for net new loan growth. That, to me, is good provision. Said a different way, if we weren't growing loans and customer relationships, our provision would have been $7 million lower. I'd rather be growing profitable loan relationships. With what we see, combined with a conservative outlook, we currently feel very well positioned with our reserve levels at over 2x industry averages. Slide 18 shows our overall capital strength, which gives us great comfort that we are well positioned to thrive in whatever environment lies ahead. And to wrap up on Slide 19, here's what we are focused on for the rest of '23. We have and will always start with soundness and that has served us quite well in the current industry stress. We will continue to do what we do well, know our customers and keep our balance sheet strong. On the profitability front, we are absolutely focused on controlling what we can control, which is making high-quality loans, staying disciplined on pricing and managing our expenses very tightly. And on the growth front, we remain incredibly excited about the power of our business model. Our lending businesses continue to provide excellent value to our customers, resulting in strong loan production and growth and we look for opportunities every day to add more revenue producers to our attractive platform. We have our first 10 customers up and running on our new treasury management platform with strong reviews. More are being added each day, and this is a big step in our journey towards fuller customer relationships and attractive lower-cost operating accounts, our people are ready to make this happen. And we still remain very confident that our embedded banking platform and all the technology investments that we are making are going to be absolute game changers in this industry. With that, we can open it up for questions.