You know the drill. A new deal lands and the first hour disappears into rebuilding the same DCF you built last week. Tabs, year columns, cash flow lines, returns panel. Repetitive work that still has to be right. That setup time crowds out thinking. Assumptions get rushed because the build ate your window. This fixes that. You get a clean, structured workbook so you can focus on the deal. Underwriting ~10 min to run Build Multi-Year DCF Model Vic prompt Use Vic to build a 10-year DCF model for a commercial real estate acquisition. Purpose A human analyst takes about 60 minutes to build this model. CRE Agents completes it in about 10 minutes. Inputs Property Type Optional Model Type Optional Levered Optional Hold Period Years Optional Deal Inputs Optional Outputs A dynamic .xlsx file with the completed DCF model ready to receive your deal inputs. Time saved Turns roughly an hour of manual work into about ten minutes. How it works You give Vic a simple instruction and whatever details you have. The core line is: "Use Vic to build a 10-year DCF model for a commercial real estate acquisition." Add context like property type, a levered view, your hold period, or any inputs you already have. If you leave things out, the model still comes back structured and ready for inputs. Vic returns a dynamic .xlsx file. It runs from Year 0 through the hold with clear sections for investment, operations, and reversion. It includes net unlevered and net levered cash flow, so you can see asset performance and the effect of debt side by side. The operating section follows a standard chart of accounts. That matters. When line items are consistent, you can map a rent roll or operating statement without fighting the sheet. It also makes deal comparisons cleaner because the structure stays the same. On the debt side, the model includes amortization logic and the metrics you expect. DSCR and debt yield sit next to the cash flows. The credit view lives in the same place as the equity story, which is where many underwriting models break. The reversion is wired in. No extra exit tab, no circular reference chase. The model carries to a terminal value and flows it back into the final year cash line. At the top, there is a returns panel with unlevered and levered IRR and equity multiple. It updates as you change inputs. This is the piece everyone rebuilds each time, and it is already there. This is not a black box. It is a clean starting point. Drop in assumptions, adjust the hold, or change leverage without reworking the structure. The goal is simple: cut the setup so your time goes to rent growth, expenses, and exit logic. A human analyst will spend about 60 minutes building this from scratch when moving fast. This runs in about 10 minutes and produces a consistent file each time. The time savings are clear. The bigger win is consistency. When every deal starts from the same structure, comparisons get sharper and reviews move faster. If you keep your own template, this still works. Use the output as a base and layer your firm's conventions on top. Or keep it as a clean underwriting model for early looks before you move a deal into your house model. Either way, you are not staring at a blank workbook when a deal comes in. You are in analysis mode within minutes.