Thanks, Ken. During the first quarter, Western Alliance generated reported pre-provision net revenue of $247 million, net income of $177 million and earnings per share of $1.60. Excluding the $18 million FDIC special assessment charge, PPNR was $265 million, net income of $191 million and earnings per share was $1.72. Net interest income increased $7 million from Q4 to $599 million from higher average earning asset balances as well as lower average borrowings. Non-interest income of $130 million increased $39 million quarter-over-quarter from consistent performance in mortgage banking, including an improved MSR valuation from a higher balance of servicing rights owned. We look at mortgage revenue holistically because our conservative valuation process when servicing rights are created often results in understated MSR values, which dampened gain on sale revenue. GAAP non-interest expense was $482 million or $464 million excluding the FDIC special assessment. Deposit costs of $137 million or $6 million above Q4 levels, essentially offsetting the net interest income growth during the quarter and driven by strong deposit growth from both existing and new clients in our HOA and Juris Banking businesses, along with the continued rebound in mortgage warehouse from seasonal lows. Typical seasonal factors as well as the reset of incentive compensation accruals, which were discounted in 2023 were the primary reasons for the increase in salaries and employee benefits in Q1. Provision expense of $15 million resulted from loan growth as well as $9.8 million in net charge-offs, while our economic outlook remains stable. Lastly, our effective tax rate fell to 23.5% from a temporarily elevated rate last quarter. Loans held for investment grew $403 million to $50.7 billion, while deposits increased $6.9 billion to $62.2 billion at quarter end. As a result, our held-for-investment loan-to-deposit ratio fell to 81% from 91% last quarter. Outsized deposit growth accelerated our liquidity building efforts. Securities and cash increased by $0.4 billion (ph) quarter-over-quarter and allowed for a further $1 billion reduction in borrowings. Finally, tangible book value per share expanded $0.58 for the quarter to $47.30 from retained earnings, which more than offset a modest rate driven increase in our negative AOCI position. Held-for-investment loan growth of $403 million occurred predominantly in C&I categories. Commercial and industrial growth of $646 million demonstrated noteworthy progress in our regional commercial banking strategy as well as success in both mortgage warehouse and tech and innovation. C&I growth also mitigated a purposeful reduction in commercial real estate. On a year-over-year basis, total loans increased $4.3 billion, almost entirely from C&I production, which has been a point of emphasis for the bank. Outstanding deposit growth of $6.9 billion resulted from broad-based growth and market share gains from our regions, commercial deposit businesses and digital consumer channels. More specifically, our regions contributed approximately $1 billion HOA and digital consumer each over $800 million; Juris Banking over $400 million; and Corporate Trust added $160 million. Mortgage warehouse deposits reacquired the $3.5 billion and fully replace Q4 outflows as our DDA deposit balance at March 31 surpassed where we were at September 30. Overall, in a more stable rate environment, we are experiencing minimal mix shift of existing client funds into higher cost deposits. Turning now to our net interest drivers. Held-for-investment loan yields increased 12 basis points due to the higher rate environment. Loan growth was weighted towards the end of the quarter as demonstrated by period-end loan balances exceeding average balances by $1 billion. The yield on total securities decreased 33 basis points to 4.66% from our efforts to significantly enhance our liquidity profile, which resulted in a total high-quality liquid securities increasing $4.8 billion from Q4. In addition, the proportion of average interest earning assets invested in securities and cash increased 23% from 21% in the fourth quarter as a result of these repositioning efforts, which have largely been completed. These efforts position us well to deploy incremental funds to higher-yielding commercial loans earlier than initially expected as well as to manage the cost of deposits lower ahead of the Fed rate cut. The cost of total interest-bearing deposits expanded 11 basis points, while the total cost of funds was flat at 2.82% as average short-term borrowings declined $1.8 billion to 8% of average interest-bearing liabilities. In aggregate, net interest income increased approximately $7 million, while net interest margin of 3.60% compressed 5 basis points due to the earning asset mix shift and securities we discussed. Additionally, adjusting for the increased FDIC special assessment and deposit costs, our adjusted efficiency ratio for the quarter was 54.4%, which also reflected higher seasonal costs. Deposit costs moved up only $6 million or 4.6% quarter-over-quarter, even though average balances of ECR-related deposits grew $1.4 billion or 7%. Asset quality metrics continue to remain steady and are reflective of our ongoing forward-looking portfolio monitoring and proactive credit mitigation strategy, which produced low realized losses. In aggregate, special mention loans and classified assets declined $139 million from Q4. Non-performing assets increased $126 million to $407 million or 53 basis points of total assets, as we execute our strategy to accelerate resolution for this subset of loans and proactively address them before reaching maturity. Notably, about two-thirds of our NPLs are paying as agreed with regard to debt service obligations. As stated previously, we've largely avoided the largest urban centers for commercial real estate lending that have experienced more value contraction in the nation at large. We see that in our submarkets, which we watch closely, our borrowers projections continue to perform better with more stable appraisals than other markets. Quarterly net loan charge-offs were $9.8 million or 8 basis points of average loans provision expense of $15.2 million covered net charge-offs and provided reserves in concert with loan growth. Our allowance for funded loans increased $4 million from the prior quarter to $340 million and the allowance for credit loss ratio to funded loans of 74 basis points was stable, covering 94% of non-performing loans. The valuation of NPLs, which primarily consists of real estate secured credits are confirmed by fair value appraisals and collateral. Our CET1 ratio again grew 20 points to 11% or 10% when adjusted for our negative AOCI position, which is 160 basis points higher year-over-year and 230 basis points above our Q3 2022 level when our repositioning efforts began. Our tangible common equity-to-total assets ratio moved down approximately 50 basis points from Q4 to 6.8%, as asset growth in low-risk categories exceeded organic capital accretion from higher earnings. Tangible book value per share increased $0.58 from December 31 to $47.30 for retained earnings growth outpacing the higher AOCI offset. Our consistent upward trajectory and tangible book value per share has outpaced peers by over 4 times since 2013, including strong growth in 2023. I'll now hand the call back to Ken.