All right. Thank you, Frank. Good morning, everyone. As Frank mentioned, we have a long track record of organic growth while delivering leading performance metrics. And what we've built here is a highly valuable franchise, one that I believe is a compelling investment opportunity, especially at these market levels. We're currently trading at less than 1.2x tangible book, and we believe and we estimate that is 20% behind what the metrics tell us. And I want to start there and add some more detail before covering the rest of the quarter. Overall, on operating earnings, PPNR easily reached a new record, reflecting that strong organic growth and a continued stable and strong net interest margin. And this quarter, again, we are right at about 370. I have to tell you, although not completely unexpected, I was quite pleased with how the results turned out for the quarter, in particular, that large amount of growth combined with a stable margin. Spreads on new loan originations have tightened. And my initial outlook was the more we grew the balance sheet, the more compression we would have, but it turns out we had close to no compression on a core basis. I know all of you out there live and die by 5 basis points, but there is easily plus or minus 5 basis points of natural volatility in NIMs for all banks. And keep in mind, our margin never compressed over the past 2 years. We have maintained margins at a very profitable level for an extended period of time. I'll attribute our NIM performance and stability to pricing discipline, to stability and pricing discipline from our lending team, combined with relationship banking, in other words, the building of deposits along with the loan growth. The other metric I'm watching is our efficiency ratio. We have reported and we've guided our expense growth has been accelerating, especially as we add significant staff, reward our people with incentive compensation and continue to make technology investments. But even with that double-digit growth in OpEx, our efficiency ratio has remained very low, decreasing again this quarter to 38.4. Let me turn to some details on the quarter, and I'll conclude with some comments on our outlook and give you guys some guidance. So once again, a truly remarkable quarter, highlighting the strength of the organic origination franchise we've built here over the past decade. Deposits led the way this quarter, growing by a record $700 million or more than 10% sequentially. We were very effective at repricing deposits in terms of both magnitude and timing. That served to not only retain deposits, but also attract new clients. And we expect that a large majority of those new deposits will benefit us going forward. We believe most will stick and some will evolve into larger relationships. And in any case, the deposit growth and a good portion of it was CDs, added fixed duration to our liabilities, helping to protect the margin over the next year. Loans, they grew by 8.5% sequentially. The growth reflects not only strong market conditions for bank lending in general, but also our culture, our new hires and our geographic expansion. As you know, rates have risen dramatically, but duration max spreads have been tight by historical standards, probably due more than anything else to the speed of rate increases, essentially the beta on loans. We have had success, probably a little better than most on driving our origination rates higher. There's still room to go, even though, as Frank mentioned, our rates have already crossed well above 6% in the fourth quarter. So we do expect continued upward movement on loan pricing and wider spreads as we finish out the year and head into 2023. We all know the Fed is set to continue to raise short rates, but hopefully, the longer end will be less volatile. We, of course, will continue to monitor that. With that in mind, we will continue to grow as we always have. That is with a focus on relationship to banking, which includes deposits. Virtually all loans originated this quarter had at least some deposit relationship. The overall segment composition of loan growth was consistent for ConnectOne, although construction remained about flat and that's typical for construction when rates are rising. And just to give you a little more color, 75% of the loan growth was from our traditional markets and existing clients, while about 25% of it came from new hires, new markets such as Florida and new verticals, such as franchise or health care lending. For the quarter, about 2/3 of the growth was CRE, while 1/3 was commercial, including owner-occupied. We've maintained strict underwriting standards with regard to LTVs, cap rates and distressed debt service coverage ratios. Now turning to the margin and net interest income. And there's always moving parts here. So let me just reset the landscape a little bit. As a reminder, the second quarter included $3.5 million of favorable but nonrecurring items in our NIM. So our core margin declined by just a few basis points. But more importantly, reported net interest income increased by 3.5% sequentially. And if you adjust out those special items on a core basis, it increased by 8.5% sequentially. Our net interest margin remains very strong relative to both the industry and to our own historical standards and is driving solid performance metrics, including PPNR, return on equity and assets and the efficiency ratio. Our static core balance sheet has been and is well immunized. In other words, we've been successful when we aimed for interest rate risk neutrality. Our business development team, combined with our treasury team have done a great job maintaining a strong net interest margin throughout the full cycle of the pandemic. In our view, the beta on our core deposits has remained quite low, below 20% per our calculations. Any beta above that typically comes from new growth, which we monitor religiously and have been effective at minimizing. Lower beta performance in many other banks also reflects deposit runoff at those banks. So the comparison to us is a little bit apples to oranges. Turning to noninterest income. At about $3.5 million for the quarter, it was lower than typical. BoeFly is contributing about $400,000 per quarter now on fee income. That continues to grow. Gains on sale of loans declined as this quarter it was only represented only by SBA. There were no residential or CRE sales this quarter. As I mentioned before, we sell CRE strictly on an opportunistic basis, and we have some in the pipeline today, so you'll see some gains in quarter 4. In terms of expenses, as I've mentioned before, we continue to hire talented staff and that along with wage inflation has caused a sequential increase at about 5% per quarter. I expect that to moderate a bit in quarter 4. And for those out there who know us well, our best-in-cost efficiency is based on our branch-light model, technology and revenue growth. And in terms of credit quality and CECL provisioning, first, all signs remain positive. Charge-offs were next to nothing. Same is true for delinquencies. We have less than $1 million in 30-plus day delinquency at quarter end. That's 0.01% of loans. Nonperformance continues to decline and taxi medallion reserves are trending towards a recovery. There were virtually no additional reserves for any specific credits. Provisioning was elevated in the quarter, increasing our reserves by about $10 million, given the growth and that basically maintained our reserve-to-loan percentage of 1.16%. Actually, it was up a couple of basis points. About $6 million of the $10 million of the reserve supported growth in the portfolio. The other $4 million came from macroeconomic factors, namely a reduction in the forecasted GDP growth. And the biggest impact for us there was in the C&I segment. In any case, we think it makes sense to be building reserves at this time, notwithstanding the strong credit metrics for ConnectOne and for the industry in general. And finally, I do want to mention our tangible book value creation, which is up 30% over the last 10 quarters and that reflects both our strong earnings and management of the securities book. All our securities are available for sale, which is the way it should be. The portfolio is a source of liquidity. We refrained from purchasing securities during the pandemic when rates were low and we only restarted purchases recently at today's much higher treasury levels. We also have in place hedges protecting about half the portfolio. And with that, we offset about $50 million in pretax securities devaluation. All in all, the security devaluation represents less than 4% in tangible capital, and our tangible book value per share is now up 10 consecutive quarters to about $21 per share. Looking forward, loan growth is expected to slow to an approximately 10% annualized rate in the fourth quarter. That's based on our actual pipeline, could fluctuate by the level of prepayments. And we are attributing the decline in growth to a slowdown in demand resulting from higher rates. Loan growth in 2023 will naturally depend on economic conditions. On the net interest margin side, there are, of course, pluses and minuses. Loan yields continue to increase, both in absolute terms and spread terms. I don't think that 20% of our portfolio is pure variable, 40% of it is adjustable and our average rate on originations in the fourth quarter so far is approximately 6.25%. The difficult part of the equation is the cost of funding with continued quantitative tightening. And the recent data suggests that the Fed is working to actually reduce the money supply. There will be even more competition for deposits. So all in all, we could see some moderate core compression. I think that's true for ConnectOne, it's also true for the entire industry. But we still expect increased net interest income in quarter 4. In terms of noninterest income, quarter 3, as I mentioned before, represented a low point for us. I expect continued increases from BoeFly as well as CRE gains on sale from time to time, and SBA income is building will likely contribute more in the future. On OpEx, I did mention earlier that we see the expense growth moderating a bit. We are looking at slower expense growth in quarter 4, but that could pick up in quarter 1 as company-wide compensation increase is going to effect. In terms of provisioning for loan losses, it's a little early to project. But with slower growth, I would expect reserve increases to slow down with the caveat that economic forecast could always take the turn for the worse. And with that, I'm going to turn it back over to Frank.