Thanks, John, and good morning, everyone. I'll start on Slide 5 with our GAAP and adjusted earnings for the second quarter. We reported GAAP net income to common shareholders of $177 million with diluted earnings per share of $1.03. On an adjusted basis, we reported net income to common shareholders of $216 million and diluted EPS of $1.26. The adjustment was a pre-tax $49 million charge as a result of repositioning of our securities portfolio. Next, I'll review balance sheet trends beginning on Slide 6. Total assets were $77 billion at period end, up nearly $700 million from the first quarter. Our security balances were up $165 million relative to the first quarter. The yield on the portfolio increased 22 basis points linked quarter to 3.86%. In the quarter, we sold securities with a book value of $962 million and reinvested with a nearly 400 basis point improvement in yield. These securities had a duration of 3.7 years, and we anticipate an earn back of less than 1.5 years. The restructuring contributed 11 basis points of the portfolio improvement. We expect that we'll add another 13 basis points in the third quarter as yields will fully reflect the restructuring that occurred midway through the second quarter. Reinvestment of cash flows and portfolio growth made up the balance of the improvement in yields for the quarter. It's notable that we manage our securities restructuring such that it did not meaningfully impact our capital ratios. Loans increased $475 million or 0.9% over the linked quarter, with the majority of the growth driven by commercial categories. Total deposits were up $1.5 billion with growth driven by interLINK, Ametros and Consumer Banking, offset by a seasonal decline in public funds. Loan to deposit ratio was 83% in the range of where we expect to operate over the next few quarters. Borrowings decreased $1 billion as we replace borrowings with core deposits from interLINK. Capital levels improved modestly. The Common Equity Tier 1 ratio was 10.6%, and our tangible common equity ratio was 7.18%. Tangible book value increased to $30.82 per common share with the increase from the prior quarter driven by retained earnings, offset by a small increase in AOCI. In a steady interest rate environment, we anticipate $100 million of unrealized security losses would accrete back into capital annually. Loan trends are highlighted on Slide 7. In total, loans were up $475 million or 0.9% linked quarter. Growth was driven by commercial real estate and C&I. As we said on our last earnings call, we would not expect significant growth in the CRE portfolio beyond this quarter. The yield on the loan portfolio was flat as we continue to see mix shift toward categories with lower credit spreads. Floating and periodic loans were 58% of total loans at quarter end. We provide additional detail on deposits on Slide 8. We grew total deposits $1.5 billion with growth driven by interLINK, Consumer Banking and Ametros. When combined transactional and low cost, long duration health care financial services deposits comprised 45% of our deposit base. Our DDA balances were down $220 million relative to the prior quarter as migration to higher cost deposit categories is slowing. Our total deposit cost was up 12 basis points over the prior quarter to 235 basis points. For the month of June, the deposit cost was 237 basis points. Increases were the result of clients opting for higher yielding products, renewals in our CD portfolio and the utilization of interLINK to replace wholesale borrowings. Our total cost of funds was up a less significant 10 basis points and our cumulative cycle to date total deposit beta is now 44%. On Slide 9, we illustrate our funding beta assumptions. On the left hand side, we have updated our deposit beta assumption to incorporate the third quarter during which we expect our cycle to date beta to hold steady at 45%. Price competition for deposit has slowed and over the course of the second quarter, we successfully piloted small decreases in pricing of certain products. Additionally, we have repriced substantially all our CD portfolio in the past year and renewals are now pricing below legacy rates. These factors plus the HSA deposit opportunity John mentioned in his remarks will contribute to a slower pace of deposit rate increases. We've also show our funding beta on the right hand side, which is a better illustration of the power of our unique deposit profile. While our utilization of interLINK as a source of liquidity results in a higher deposit beta, in conjunction with our other deposit products, it lowers total funding costs and enhances offbeat balance sheet liquidity. As you can see, this advantage by looking at our all-in funding costs over the last 12 months compared to peer and industry trends. Moving to Slide 10. We highlight our reported to adjusted income statement, compared to our adjusted earnings for the prior period. Net interest income was up $5 million from prior quarter driven by balance sheet growth and higher earning asset yields, partially offset by higher funding costs. Adjusted non-interest income was down $5 million, driven by lower BOLI income and lower deposit and customer hedging activity. Adjusted expenses were up $5 million and the provision increased $13.5 million. Excluding adjustments, our tax rate was 21.2% this quarter, up from 20.7% in the first quarter. Overall, adjusted net income was down $17 million relative to the prior quarter, and our efficiency ratio was 46%. On Slide 11, we highlight net interest income, which increased $5 million or 0.8% linked quarter, driven by balance sheet growth and the repositioning of our securities portfolio. The net interest margin was down 3 basis points to 332 basis points as a result of increased funding costs, which were partially offset by higher asset yields. Our yield on earning assets increased 6 basis points over prior quarter with loan yields flat and the securities portfolio up 22 basis points. Deposit costs were up 12 basis points as we utilize interLINK to reduce our wholesale borrowings. As I previously mentioned, we expect the underlying pace of deposit repricing to continue to moderate. Total liability costs were up 10 basis points relative to a 12 basis point increase in the last quarter. On Slide 12 is non-interest income, which was down $5 million versus prior quarter on an adjusted basis. There were a number of components driving the decline, including $4 million in lower HSA fees, driven by seasonal trends and account fees and a $1 million lower benefit from CVA adjustment whose valuation was unchanged this quarter. Non-interest expense is on Slide 13, report adjusted expenses of $326 million, up $5 million from the prior quarter. $3 million of the increase came from a full quarter of Ametros operating expense and intangibles and the remaining increase related to investments in technology and increased deposit insurance costs. Slide 14 details components of our allowance for credit losses, which was up relative to prior quarter. After recording $33 million in net charge-offs, we recorded a $61 million provision, of which $55 million was primarily due to credit factors and $6 million due to loan growth. As a result, our allowance coverage to loans increased to 130 basis points from 126 basis points last quarter. I would also note, we increased reserves in the traditional office portfolio by $10 million in the quarter. Slide 15 highlights our key asset quality metrics. On the upper left, non-performing assets increased $85 million relative to the prior quarter, with non-performing loans now representing 72 basis points of total loans. As John indicated earlier, the increase in NPLs was related to four office credits. Commercial classified loans as a percent of commercial loans increased to 291 basis points from 224 basis points as classified loans increased by $286 million on an absolute basis. Classified loan increase was concentrated in health care and office. Net charge-offs on the upper right totaled $33 million or 26 basis points of average loans on an annualized basis, down modestly from last quarter's level. On Slide 16, we maintained strong capital levels. Our common equity Tier 1 ratio was 10.6%, and our tangible common equity ratio was 7.2%. Our tangible book value was $30.82 a share. I'll wrap up my comments on Slide 17 with our outlook for 2024. We expect loans to grow by 4% to 5% for the full year, with growth for the remainder of the year driven by C&I categories. We're anticipating deposit growth in the 5% range with growth in diverse products. We now expect net interest income in the range of $2.32 billion, $2.34 billion on a non-FTE basis, which will effectively leave us flat on a year-over-year basis. For those modeling net interest income on an FTE basis, the FTE adjustment is now expected to be roughly $55 million from $65 million previously. Our net interest income outlook assumes one cut to Fed funds rate in December. Adjusted non-interest income will be roughly $375 million at the lower end of our prior range. Adjusted expenses continue to be in the range of $1.3 billion to $1.325 billion, our efficiency ratio is expected to be in the mid-40% range. We expect an effective tax rate of 21%, and we remain prudent managers to capital. Our near term common equity Tier 1 ratio target is 11%, which we anticipate will achieve by year end 2024, and as you can see, our long-term target continues to be 10.5%. With that, I'll turn it back to John for closing remarks.