Yes. Thanks, Ned, and good morning, everyone. Second quarter net income was $10.8 million or $0.63 per share. Net interest income was $31.6 million and the margin was 1.83%. Average earning assets increased by $7 million and had a yield of 4.97%, up by 4 basis points. On the funding side, average in-market interest bearing deposits increased by $36 million and average wholesale funding decreased by $25 million. The rate on interest bearing liabilities increased by 5 basis points to 3.68%. Prepayment fee income was $46,000 in the second quarter and $20,000 in the first quarter, neither with any impact to the margin. Non-interest income comprised 35% of revenue and amounted to $16.7 million, down by $503,000 or 3% from Q1. Included in the second quarter was a $988,000 early gain on the sale of our operations center, while the first quarter included $2.1 million in settlement income. Excluding these items, non-interest income was up by $609,000 or 4%. Wealth management revenues were $9.7 million, up by $340,000 or 4%. This included an increase of $190,000 in seasonal transaction-based revenues, largely tax servicing, as well as an increase of $150,000 in asset-based revenues, which correlated to an increase of 1% in average AUA balances. Mortgage banking revenues totaled $2.8 million, up by $255,000 or 10%. Realized gains were $2.2 million, up by 39%. Turning to expenses. Non-interest expenses were down $453,000, or 1% from Q1. Salaries expense decreased by $515,000 or 2% reflecting lower staffing levels and payroll tax expense, partially offset by higher mortgage commissions. In the second quarter, the effective tax rate was 21.8%. We estimate our full year 2024 effective tax rate will be 21.2%. Turning to the balance sheet. Total loans were down by $56 million or 1% from March 31. In the second quarter, total commercial loans decreased by $22 million or 1% and residential loans decreased by $27 million, also 1%. In-market deposits, which exclude wholesale broker time deposits, were seasonally down by $37 million from March 31. Wholesale broker deposits were down by $355 million and Federal Home Loan Bank borrowings were up by $310 million from March 31, reflecting a shift in wholesale funding mix based on pricing. Our loan to deposit ratio increased in the quarter due to the reduction in broker deposits. We have since replenished broker deposits in the third quarter. Turning to asset quality. These metrics remain solid. Non-accruing loans were 54 basis points and past due loans were 21 basis points as a percentage of total loans. The allowance totaled $42.4 million or 75 basis points of total loans and provided NPL coverage of 139%. We had net charge-offs of $27,000 in the second quarter and $79,000 year-to-date. And at this point, I will turn the call back to Ned.