Excellent. Thank you, Chip, and good morning to everybody. Let's start on slide 14, with a high-level earnings summary of the quarter and it was quite a good one for us here at Live Oak. The key commitments we made about what we would do in Q3 such as margin performance, continued loan growth stable credit quality and moderating expenses were all delivered. And while we cannot predict what the economic outlook might bring the actions we took in the first quarter, our performance in both the last two quarters and the ongoing strength of our business model have set us on a strong path towards continued earnings and customer growth over the next several quarters. Put some numbers to it. In Q3, we earned $0.88, while aided by a positive change in estimate related to our servicing asset and fair value loans PPNR, excluding that $15 million impact grew nicely again this quarter driven by strong net interest income growth and good expense management. In addition, our credit quality remains strong. Loan production was up almost $1.1 billion from $860 million in the second quarter as closing activity was spicier than it had been in the first half of the year and pipelines continue to be very healthy. Deposit growth was intentionally moderate this quarter as we soaked up some of the excess liquidity, we had built coming out of March. Very importantly, however, our business customer deposits our primary focus were up 12% linked-quarter. Since March, we have grown business deposits 36% or $1 billion and have done so without increasing our rates paid on business savings and we continue to see strong inflows great performance by our teams and a testament to our brand. As discussed in April, we believe that Q2 would mark the bottom for net interest margin and we're pleased to see that our margin was 3.37% in Q3, up from 3.29% in the second quarter. Even more importantly, net interest income at $89 million is up almost $7 million or 9% from last quarter, owing to strong loan growth and disciplined loan and deposit pricing by our teams. I'll get into a bit more detail on the reasons for our NIM resiliency in the positive net interest income growth in a few minutes. But in short, it's due to the excellent efforts by our lenders, along with our deposit and treasury teams to remain both competitive with our customer offerings and disciplined with our pricing. Fee income was improved linked quarter on a core basis with relatively steady gain on sale premiums. Expenses declined again quarter-over-quarter. And while we expect continued discipline here as Chip said, we're a growing company, which will continue to invest in good costs, which are those that support continued revenue growth. Provision declined modestly with the vast majority of net charge-offs like Chip said from a credit previously impaired and largely reserved for and the majority of the provision build came from net new loan growth, which I believe is good provision. Let's turn to our net interest income and margin trends on slide 16. As we've discussed in prior calls, we expected to see downward pressure on the NIM in the first half of the year, because of the accelerated deposit repricing from the Fed's rate increase cycle and that would be more rapid than the loan repricing. But in the back half of the year, as our loan repricing flowed through the balance sheet and the Fed neared the end of its rate increase cycle, we would expect NIM expansion. All of those things are still true. We've been able to both grow deposits and hold savings rates very steady since March, due to our already strong rate offering. Loan repricing tailwinds continue as our lenders remain disciplined with new production yields. We expect loan pricing discipline to remain strong, but deposit competition to continue increasing. Overall, however, while the trajectory may not be linear quarter-to-quarter, we do expect steady NIM expansion and net interest income improvement over the next several quarters. A few highlights to point out. First, on the deposit side. You see that we again provided information on both Live Oak and the top digital competitors, as it relates to pricing in betas. Even though the Fed's move 50 bps since mid-March, we were already in a highly competitive position to attract customer deposits, particularly on the business side, such that we continue to see healthy deposit growth, while holding very steady on savings rates and our through-the-cycle beta of 70% is exactly what we've communicated all along as our expectation. It is modestly better than that on the business side. Now let's take a look at the loan side. Our loan yields have been moving up nicely as you can see in the table, but hadn't been moving nearly as rapidly as deposit betas. That dynamic is shifting. Two points we've made on loan yields in the last two quarters continue to hold true. Number one, loan production yields are currently being booked at rates much higher than the portfolio rates, see the $8.93 on new loan production yields in the upper right of the slide versus the 7.52% on portfolio loan yields in the upper right of the table. And number two, 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 October 1, our quarterly adjusting loans saw another 25 basis point increase in rate, owing to the 25 basis point July Fed move. And about 47% of our total loan portfolio is variable rate and almost 90% of our current production is variable rate that will certainly help. Therefore as our newer loan yields replace older loans over time, our portfolio yields will continue to rise, supporting continued stabilization then improvement in our net spread. On the deposit side, we've been able to see continuing strong customer deposit growth, however, while we have fully expected upward pricing pressure for traditional banks, we have been a bit surprised by the aggressive consumer savings pricing we've seen from top digital competitors. Time will tell if this continues and it's a trend we are monitoring closely. So what does all this mean for the NIM? Same as what we believe the last two quarters, have seen a large change in direction from the Fed or an economic shock, both of which are entirely possible given the geopolitical environment. We have hopefully seen the bottom for our NIM and we should continue to see steady margin expansion over the next several quarters. It may not be linear improvement quarter-to-quarter, but should be generally up and to the right over time. This remains an uncertain environment. So let me be very clear and transparent with our current assumptions here. First, we are assuming no further Fed rate increases and remain on hold through at least the first half of 2024. Second, deposit pricing will remain highly competitive from both traditional banks and digital competitors. And if it gets more competitive we will respond accordingly to support continued growth. Third, healthy loan growth continues on pace with current pricing. And fourth, no further major industry disruption related to deposits or liquidity. So to recap, we saw expected NIM expansion in Q3, and we're particularly pleased with the net interest income improvement we've seen. Turning to Slide 17. Our loan production in the quarter was again diverse across multiple areas with particular strength in our specialty health care and middle market sponsor, solar, senior care, educational services, self-storage and general lending verticals. As Chip talked about others are pulling back on lending, but we expect to see good opportunities for new business going forward. We're open for business and focused on growing our revenue-generating capabilities. We've already talked enough about deposit growth and pricing dynamics. So let's move on to Slide 19 take a look at non-interest income trends. Our SBA sales activity and gain on sale premiums were pretty steady in Q3 not much new to report. The gain on sale at roughly 8% to 12% of quarterly total revenue feels like the right range for us. Over the last two years, we have intentionally reduced our reliance on gain on sale income to both improve the consistency of our revenue by shifting to more net interest income and to provide more flexibility. In addition the USDA secondary market has been nonexistent for six quarters now. Eventually that will change and that will provide us with technique used to estimate the fair value of our servicing asset and the mark on our held-for-sale loan portfolio. And so as a result we made a onetime adjustment to both the servicing asset and the fair value portfolio. Going forward, there will be continued variability as these assets are revalued quarterly but we believe that these revisions are more representative of the value of the portfolios. Turning to expenses on Slide 20. We're doing just as we said we would do. We're moderating our expense growth while continuing to grow revenues. And going forward we will always be opportunistic with hiring revenue producers but we are smartly managing our expense growth. We're confident in our ability to consistently grow our PPNR and improve our efficiency ratio over the next several quarters. Our expenses were down linked quarter. And as you can see we have held salary and employee levels steady for the past several quarters even while continuing to invest in next-generation technology. One item, I will mention, as I wrap up expenses, which also relates to the variability in the tax rate. As you have seen over the last few years we will from time to time invest in investment tax credits related to solar projects. These tax credit impairments show up as a non-interest expense in a given quarter but they're more than offset in the tax expense line over the course of the year resulting in an overall net benefit after tax earnings. That is why you will see much variability in our effective tax rate from quarter-to-quarter and you saw it again this quarter with only a 7% tax rate. In Q4, we expect one of those investment tax credit investments to hit non-interest expense for about $16 million but it will ultimately lead to an effective tax rate for the full year 2023 of about 10% so a net positive to us overall. Turning to credit trends on Slide 21. As Chip discussed earlier credit metrics remain strong. We continue to actively monitor the existing portfolio and don't currently see any significant weak spots. Past dues are low non-accruals remain quite manageable as well. And as you can see the credit quality trends across all our three major business segments are healthy. As expected in the current environment we moved some more loans to non-accrual status during the quarter. But on the bottom left of the slide you'll see a five-quarter trend of our non-accruals and see that they're still at very manageable levels. Provisioning again was healthy largely driven by what I call good provision for new loan growth. Our reserves on guaranteed loans as Chip said remain almost twice as high as the industry average and 40% of our total loan portfolio is government guaranteed. Slide 22 shows our overall capital strength, which continues to give us great ability to continue providing growth capital to our small business customers and comfort that we are well positioned to thrive in whatever environment lies ahead. So to wrap up on Slide 23, I really like our position at Live Oak over the long term. Our revenue growth has a strong upward bias our loan production engine and reduced reliance on secondary market sales is producing solid double-digit loan growth. That loan growth coupled with strong new loan nation yields and deposit rates that are already at market is leading to growing net interest income and expanding margins, and we are in the very early innings of attracting checking accounts which will be a tailwind to building longer-term customer relationships and lowering funding costs for years to come. We've already made smart investments in lender support and technology over the last few years. So while our expenses will grow commensurate with a growing company, that is adding what I call good costs such as new lenders and they should increase as we grow over the next several years. Credit quality is strong. And we expect it to hold up very well on a relative basis in whatever credit environment we might face. And again having 40% of our portfolio government guaranteed when the industry is about 1/10 of that, provides great comfort and confidence. Finally and most importantly, we have got the best mission inspired people and culture in the industry serving America's small businesses. With that, we're happy to take questions.