You know the moment. You are building a BOV and need a clear answer to the only macro question owners care about: why now. You end up stitching together rate headlines, a credit read, and a few charts that do not quite line up. The result is either too thin to carry the argument or too long to survive the pitch. This task closes that gap and gives you a clean, current call you can defend. Brokerage ~5 min to run Build a Market Timing Thesis Vic prompt Use Vic to build a market timing thesis for a 250,000 sf industrial listing pitch in the Midwest. Purpose A broker can embed a current, defensible macro argument in every pitch without spending 30 minutes assembling the data each time. Inputs Subject Required Categories Optional Output Format Optional Outputs A concise market-timing narrative in chat or Word that leads with a clear why-now call and supporting macro points, ready to drop into a pitch or BOV. Time saved Turns roughly 30 minutes of manual work into about five minutes. How it works Give Vic the subject and, if you want, the property type and your preferred output format. Vic returns a concise market timing thesis you can paste into a pitch or BOV. It is written in plain CRE language, formatted for chat or Word, and ready to use. Run it like this: Use Vic to build a market timing thesis for a 250,000 sf industrial listing pitch in the Midwest. What the thesis includes A clear position in the cycle. It states where the rate and credit cycle sits today and the near term direction. No hedging, no filler. A why-now call. The opening lines argue for transacting now, not a generic outlook that could fit any quarter. Two or three supporting macro reads. These are the points you would otherwise pull from multiple sources and try to reconcile. They support the call without turning the section into a research memo. A national versus local caveat. It flags the gap between broad conditions and the subject market so you do not overclaim. This keeps the argument defensible in front of owners who know their submarket. What you hand over Subject. The asset you are pitching. This is required. Categories (optional). Property type or other context that shapes the tone. Output format (optional). Chat text or a Word-ready block. What you get back A tight narrative that leads with the why-now call and backs it with a small set of macro points. It reads like it belongs in a BOV, not like a pasted research note. You can drop it into your document and move on. Why this holds up in a room Owners will challenge the timing call before anything else. This task forces a position and ties it to a simple read on rates and credit. The national versus local caveat does quiet work here. It admits what the macro view cannot see, which makes the rest of the argument easier to accept. It also keeps you consistent across pitches. Instead of rebuilding the section each time, you get a repeatable structure with current inputs. That consistency shows up in how quickly you turn a draft and how clearly you present the same story across assets. Where it fits in your workflow Run it early, once you have the subject defined. Paste the output into the market section of your BOV, then layer in property specifics and comps. If you are pitching multiple assets, run it per asset so the caveat and tone match each market. The task takes about five minutes. That is the difference between a rushed paragraph and a section that carries the pitch.