Thank you, Chip, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining the call and spending the time with us this morning. I'll start today with a high-level review of 2023 on Slide 11. Top-line figures show EPS of $1.64, net interest margin of 3.35%, a 6% year-over-year adjusted PPNR growth, a 14% year-over-year loan growth driven by another year of $4 billion of loan originations, and an outstanding 56% increase year-over-year in our business deposits portfolio. Staying true to our soundness, profitability, and growth in that order of mantra, we are extremely proud of how our team was able to navigate the fastest-rising rate environment in several decades, as well as an industry-wide liquidity stress event back in March, while still providing strong year-over-year growth and positive profitability trends. From a soundness perspective, as Chip mentioned, our credit quality is healthy with positive trends in past dues and classified assets, and only 29 bps of net charge-offs and 86 bps of unguaranteed nonperforming loans, both as a percent of held for investment unguaranteed loans. Our liquidity profile remains robust as it has been throughout the entire year with 3:1 available liquidity capacity to uninsured deposits funded through a strong deposits origination engine. Our capital levels remain strong and have seen two consecutive quarters of capital ratio accretion in Q3 and Q4, 2023. From a profitability perspective, we generated a 6% year-over-year increase in core total revenue, aided by our growth in net interest margin and secondary market stabilization. Net interest margin, which we will speak to more in the upcoming slides, remains healthy at 3.35%, even though our cost of funds remains higher than industry averages, proving that as long as you are maintaining pricing discipline on the asset side, banks can still have an attractive NIMs while paying their depositors a competitive rate. Our expense growth in recent years was driven by investing in our operations and technology teams like Chip just pointed out. We took the opportunity to let our expense base begin to scale in 2023 in order to evaluate how we can grow our expense base effectively and efficiently. As such, our expenses have been relatively flat quarter-over-quarter through 2023. Yes, as BJ and Chip have said in the past, we remain a growth organization, and as such, we will continue to invest in our future and our revenue generation side of the house, what we refer to as good cost. From a growth perspective, on the lending front, inclusive in our $4 billion year of loan production was a sixth consecutive year of being the nation's largest SBA lender. Take our origination engine with the recent changes that Chip just mentioned, and we are excited about the opportunity of growing our lending business in the small loan arena. On the deposit front, our beliefs and our funding model continues to be supported by the year-in and year-out strong performance. Our total deposits have grown 16% year-over-year in a highly competitive market. What is more impressive is that we have grown our business deposits 56% year-over-year, and we have also launched our business checking product that will provide funding diversification, a lower cost of deposits, and an opportunity for our small business customers to expand their relationship with us and begin to fully operate their business through Live Oak. Switching to Q4 results specifically on Slide 12, the key commitments that we have made to you in the past as to our outlook remains true today. Loan growth continues to be strong. Credit quality has remained stable. Excluding the noise in Q4 that I will speak to shortly, expense growth has moderated, and net interest margin outlook remains positive. Our loan portfolio grew 3% quarter-over-quarter through the generation of close to $1 billion in loan originations. Our loan pipeline remains robust and healthy as we head into 2024. Our deposit growth of 3% was tailored to match our loan growth. Net interest income was up slightly quarter-over-quarter, and NIM, while down 5 bps versus Q3 2023, held in line with our expectations. Excluding the notable expense items on the right-hand side of the slide, our core expenses were flat quarter-over-quarter. Our core PPNR increased $2.3 million quarter-over-quarter, or a 5% increase, and was up $13.1 million, or 40%, compared to Q4 2022. Our credit quality remains steady and continues to perform well. Provision was down quarter-over-quarter as the health of the portfolio remained strong. We had $4 million of net charge-offs in the quarter related to four loans spread across three verticals, and the bulk of our Q4 provision was related to our loan growth, what we refer to as good provision. The primary noise in the quarter, as BJ indicated in our prior quarter call, was related to $15 million of renewable energy tax credit impairments within non-interest expense in Q4. While the benefit from these tax credits, which outweighed the Q4 expense, was experienced throughout the year within the income tax expense line, effectively lowering our annual tax rate to 10.7% for the year. Considering where we started the year, we are pleased with the momentum that we have been able to build over the last three quarters and are optimistic as we head into 2024. Moving on to Slide 13 and our net interest margin trends. Q4 2023 net interest income was slightly up linked quarter and up 4% year-over-year. While net interest margin was down 5 bps quarter-over-quarter, let's dig in here to understand the dynamics given the importance to our revenue position. On the asset front, our average rate on new production increased to just shy of 9.25%, a testament to the outstanding job our lenders continue to do on the pricing discipline front. Our total loan portfolio yield increased 9 bps quarter-over-quarter to 7.61%. As our newer loans replace older loans over time, our portfolio yields will continue to rise, supporting continued stabilization then improvement in our net spread. As a reminder, it is important to focus on both sides of the balance sheet in terms of pricing. While cost of funds typically gets the headlines, banks have to maintain their discipline on the asset side. We have done just that. On the funding front, our average cost of funds increased 18 basis points quarter-over-quarter. The primary driver of this increase was an $875 million CD maturity event, or roughly 36% of our customer CD portfolio. The rate on these renewing CDs or replacement funding was 112 basis points higher. We also repositioned our customer savings portfolios to support targeted cash flows, though as you can see on Slide 13, our base remained consistent with past guidance as well as below top digital competitors, especially on the business savings front. The retail deposit market remains highly competitive with three aspects at play. Large digital banks remain in aggressive pricing positions. Large traditional banks continue to leverage exception-based pricing to reduce their outflows. And new smaller entrants continue to rotate into the market with aggressive pricing to fund a certain goal and to establish a brand awareness. It remains a difficult funding market. I want to emphasize that soundness and liquidity will always be paramount at Live Oak, and we will position ourselves from a deposit rate perspective to ensure that our funding levels support our growth aspirations. As we head into what is an unclear 2024 rate and macroeconomic environment, let's revisit our past guidance and expectations. We expect no further major industry disruption related to deposits or liquidity. Though outlooks vary, we currently expect no additional rate hikes and anticipate the Fed to cut three times in the second half of 2024. Our interest rate risk profile remains in plus or minus net neutral position in the near term, yet the timing of the Fed cut could be beneficial or detrimental to any individual quarter's net interest margin. For example, 49% of our loans are variable quarterly adjusted, they are repriced on the first business day of the month following each quarter end. Therefore, a June rate cut would provide less benefit than an April rate cut, as there is less time for our deposits to reprice downwards ahead of the decrease to our variable rate loan portfolio. The opposite would hold true if the Fed cut is earlier in the quarter. So to recap, our prior NIM guidance holds true. We expect the trajectory to be up and to the right over time, although not in a linear fashion. Given the seasonality of deposits, upcoming CD maturity events earlier in the year, and our expected Fed actions, we largely expect to see more NIM expansion in the back half of 2024. Okay, moving on from NIM dissertation, let's turn to Slide 14 and loan origination. Our year-over-year loan production in 2023 was diverse across our multiple areas, with particular strengths in our specialty healthcare, solar, senior care, and self storage verticals. As others may pull back on lending in what could be an uncertain year, we expect to see good opportunities for new business going forward. As Chip has repeatedly said, we are open for business and then focused on growing our revenue-generating capabilities. Slide 15 details our quarter-over-quarter deposit trends. The deposit growth has intentionally moderated in half two, 2023, as we soaked up some of the excess liquidity we had built coming out of March. Our 16% year-over-year growth rate outperformed the industry, which has been essentially flat year-over-year. We continue to be confident in our deposit team's ability to generate deposit growth through competitive rate positioning, brand awareness campaigns, and quality customer service. Most notably, as I mentioned, our business customer deposits are strategic focus. We're up 56% year-over-year, or approximately $1.7 billion. Excellent job by our deposits and marketing teams in a challenging environment. Quarter-over-quarter fee income is outlined on Slide 16. Our SBA sales activity and gain on sale premiums were steady in Q4. Gain on sale at roughly 8% to 10% of quarterly total revenue continues to feel like the right range. One notable item to report is that in January 2024, we sold our first two USDA loans in over seven quarters. While it's too early to celebrate, we're excited about this development. Having the ability to sell USDA loans provides our team with additional optionality, liquidity, and balance sheet management tactics. Turning to expenses on Slide 17, our core expenses in Q4 2023 were $74 million, essentially flat to Q3 2023 and consistent with our commitments made in prior quarters. Moderating our expense growth while continuing to grow revenues is the recipe of operating leverage expansion. Going forward, while we will remain opportunistic with hiring revenue producers and ensuring that we are investing in areas that support our growth and growing complexity, we will do so intelligently to manage our expense growth. We remain confident in our ability to consistently grow our PPNR and improve our efficiency ratio as we head into 2024. Turning to credit trends on Slide 18, as Chip discussed earlier, our credit quality remains strong and continues to tell a powerful story about American small business owners. They are financially savvy and resourceful, and our borrowers have adjusted well to changing economic conditions. We continue to actively monitor the existing portfolio, have yet to see any notable surprises outside our expectations, and do not currently see any significant weak spots. Past dues are the lowest that they have been over the last five quarters. As expected in the current environment, we moved some more loans to nonaccrual status during the quarter. But on the bottom left of this slide, you see a five-quarter trend of non-accruals, and you can see that this quarter's non-accruals to total loans are still at very manageable levels. Overall, on the top right, you can see that the credit quality trends across all our three major business segments are healthy. As mentioned, Q4 2023 provisioning was driven by loan growth. Our reserves on guaranteed loans remains twice as high as the industry average, and 38% of our total loan portfolio is government guaranteed. Lastly, we recognize that commercial real estate is the focus in the industry given the shift in working behavior and more employees working remotely. However, it's important to note that not all commercial real estate lending is created equal. Our commercial real estate portfolio is primarily owner-occupied, think dentist office, veterinarians. 17% of our CRE portfolio is non-owner occupied, but it's primarily senior housing and storage. And lastly, 45% of our CRE portfolio is government guaranteed. Slide 19 highlights 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. To wrap up on Slide 20, I'm proud of what this organization has been able to accomplish in a challenging 2023, and I'm very bullish on our position over the long-term. Our loan production engine, along with reduced reliance on secondary market sales, is producing solid, double-digit loan growth. That loan growth, coupled with excellent pricing discipline on both the lending and funding fronts, has core recurring revenue on an upwards trajectory. It’s early, but as we are successful at attracting non-interest bearing checking accounts, we will be able to expand our customer relationships, providing a tailwind of lowering funding costs for years to come. We will continue to invest in our growth and be opportunistic in our addition of revenue-generating lenders and products, yet we will do so intelligently to balance both near-term earnings and long-term growth aspirations. Credit quality is a strength. And we expect it to hold up well on a relative basis in whatever credit environment that we may face. Having close to 40% of our portfolio government guaranteed when the industry is about one-tenth of that also provides great comfort and confidence. Finally, our not-so-secret weapon has been, and will always remain, our people and our culture. To us, treating every customer like they are the only customer is not a choice it’s a way of life. Thank you again for joining us this morning, and with that, we are happy to take questions.