Thank you, Phil. Let me start off by giving some additional color on our branch expansion growth. As Phil mentioned, this performance now includes 8 additional branches opened since we began Houston 1.0 and outside of our announced expansions in Houston, Dallas and Austin. During the first quarter, our branch expansion delivered $0.14 or 5.6% of EPS accretion. We continue to be pleased with the volumes we've been able to achieve. On a year-over-year basis, average loans grew 33% and represents 12.7% of loans up from 10.1% a year ago, while average deposits grew 21%, representing 8.3% of deposits versus 7% in the same period last year. The expansion branches have now grown to $2.9 billion in loans, $3.6 billion in deposits and have added approximately 95,000 new households. As we have said in the past, our organic growth strategy is both durable and scalable. We opened 2 new locations in the first quarter, one in the Austin region and one in the Dallas region. Our current plan is to open an additional 10 to 12 branches over the balance of 2026. Now moving to the first quarter financial performance for the company. Our net interest margin percentage was 3.74% for the quarter, up 8 basis points from the 3.66% reported last quarter. Lower interest-bearing deposits and repos during the quarter, which negatively impacts net interest income had a positive impact on net interest margin due to a lower relative spread to the overnight rates. Looking at our investment portfolio. The total investment portfolio averaged $19.9 billion during the first quarter, flat with the previous quarter. Investment purchases during the quarter totaled $2.3 billion, consisting of $1.23 billion of treasuries, yielding 3.66%, $618 million of Agency MBS securities, yielding 5.09% and $423 million of municipals yielding 5.71% on a tax equivalent basis. Maturities during the quarter included $400 million of treasuries with an average yield of 3.44%, $540 million of municipals at an average tax equivalent yield of 3.53% and $430 million of Agency MBS paydowns. The net unrealized loss on available-for-sale portfolio at the end of the quarter was $1.15 billion compared to $1.04 billion reported at the end of the previous quarter. The tax equivalent yield on the total investment portfolio during the quarter was 3.85%, up 3 basis points from the previous quarter. The taxable portfolio averaged $12.7 billion flat with the prior quarter and had a yield of 3.39%, up slightly from 3.38% in the prior quarter. Our tax-exempt municipal portfolio averaged $7.1 billion down $76 million from the prior quarter and had a taxable equivalent yield of 4.73%, up 9 basis points from the prior quarter. At the end of the first quarter, approximately 69% of the municipal portfolio was pre-refunded or PSF insured. The duration of the investment portfolio at the end of the fourth quarter was 5.2 years, down from 5.3 years at the end of the fourth quarter. Looking at our funding sources. On a linked-quarter basis, average total deposits of $42.2 billion were down $1.1 billion from the previous quarter. This seasonal decrease was about 30% noninterest-bearing and 70% interest-bearing. The cost of interest-bearing deposits in the first quarter was 1.55%, down 20 basis points from 1.75% in the first quarter. Customer repos for the first quarter averaged $4.2 billion, down $426 million from the fourth quarter. The cost of customer repos for the quarter was 2.70%, down 17 basis points from the fourth quarter. Looking at noninterest income and expenses, I'll point out a couple of seasonal and onetime items impacting the linked quarter results. Regarding noninterest income, insurance commissions and fees were up $6.9 million. Recall that the first quarter is a seasonally strong quarter. Other income was down $4 million as we received our annual VISA volume bonus of $5.4 million in the fourth quarter. Salaries and wages were down $16.3 million compared to the linked quarter. Last quarter included approximately $4.2 million in onetime expenses related to our payroll transition from bi-monthly to biweekly. Additionally, the prior quarter included $7.2 million in higher stock compensation related to our stock awards granted in October of each year, some of which by their nature, require immediate expense recognition. FDIC deposit expense was up $8.6 million compared to a quarter ago as we reversed $8.4 million of our special FDIC insurance accrual in the fourth quarter of last year. Regarding our guidance for full year 2026, our current outlook includes 125 basis point cut for the Fed funds rate in the fourth quarter. We expect net interest ... [Technical Difficulty]