You know the moment. The model is open, the call is in ten minutes, and you still need a clean read on SOFR, Treasuries, and the swap curve. You click through a few sources, copy numbers, and hope nothing moved since the last refresh. The bigger problem is not the numbers. It is tying them to the decision in front of you. Loan sizing, refi feasibility, or hedge timing hinge on the curve and recent moves, not a single rate pulled out of context. Research ~5 min to run Pull Interest Rate Report Vic prompt Use Vic to pull an interest rate report for a 150-unit multifamily refinance decision. Purpose Current rates and curve shape directly affect loan proceeds, refi feasibility, and hedge timing. The task reduces the time to assemble this information from roughly 30 minutes to about 5 minutes. Inputs Rate Check Purpose Required Outputs A concise in-chat briefing with current rates, curve context, decision implications, and a rates table. Time saved Turns roughly 30 minutes of manual work into about 5 minutes. How it works Run one command with your purpose and Vic returns a compact briefing in chat. Ask for an interest rate report for a 150 unit multifamily refinance. The purpose matters. The same market data reads differently for a construction loan than for a disposition memo, so the output is framed around the decision you need to make. You give one input, the rate check purpose. That can be loan sizing, refinancing, hedging, disposition, construction, or a committee update. Vic pulls current benchmark rates across SOFR, Treasuries, and the swap curve and stamps them with an as of date so you know what you are looking at. The briefing is short and usable. It includes a compact table of key rates, a read on the curve shape, and notes on recent changes. You also get plain language implications tied to your purpose. For a refinance, that means how current levels and the curve affect proceeds and feasibility. For hedging, it focuses on timing and where the curve offers or penalizes duration. This is not a data dump. The point is to connect the market snapshot to an action. If the curve has shifted or flattened, the note calls it out and links it to what you would do next in your scenario. If nothing meaningful has changed, that is useful too. You can move forward without reworking assumptions. The rate table is there so you can drop numbers into a model or a memo without reformatting. The observations give you language for an IC update or a quick broker call. Because the as of date is included, you can defend the timing of your inputs if someone asks. Teams keep rebuilding this view. One person checks SOFR, another looks at Treasuries, someone else pulls swaps, and then it all gets stitched together right before a decision. This task compresses that loop. It produces a single, consistent read that underwriters, asset managers, acquisitions teams, and brokers can use without reconciling sources. There is a practical benefit beyond speed. When the same purpose driven frame is used each time, decisions are easier to compare. A refinance today and a refinance next month are evaluated against a similar structure, even if the market moves. That makes it easier to explain changes in proceeds or timing to partners and committees. Five minutes is enough to line up current rates, curve context, and implications for the task at hand. That is the difference between scrambling for numbers and walking into a call with a clear position.