You know the drill. You open a few sites for SOFR, Treasuries, and swaps, copy numbers into a scratch pad, then try to explain what the curve is saying to a teammate or a credit committee. The friction is not the data. It is turning those numbers into a view that answers a specific question, like sizing a refi or deciding whether to hedge now. This task goes straight to that answer. Research ~5 min to run Pull an Interest Rate Report Vic prompt Use Vic to pull an interest rate report for refinancing a 180,000 square foot industrial asset. Purpose Replaces 30 minutes of manual rate lookup and interpretation with a 5-minute tailored summary that supports faster, better-informed calls on sizing, hedging, or exits. Inputs Rate Check Purpose Required Outputs An in-chat briefing with key rates, curve context, decision implications, and a rate table. Time saved Turns roughly 30 minutes of manual work into about five minutes. How it works Give Vic a purpose and let it run. The task pulls current benchmark rates and returns a short briefing aimed at a decision. It includes SOFR, Treasury, and swap rates with an as-of date, a read on the curve and recent moves, and a direct link to the decision you named. Run it with a simple command: Use Vic to pull an interest rate report for refinancing a 180,000 square foot industrial asset. Swap in your own purpose such as loan sizing for an acquisition, hedging a floating rate loan, or preparing a committee memo. The output matches how deals move. First, a tight snapshot of where key benchmarks sit. Second, context on the curve and recent direction, which quick checks often miss. Third, a plain read on what it means for your case, not a generic macro note. You also get a compact table of rates with the as-of date so you can paste it into a memo or share it internally without reformatting. The point is framing. A refi needs a different lens than a new acquisition or a hedge decision. This task ties the same rate set to the purpose you give it, so the output is not just numbers. It is a view that informs proceeds, timing, and structure. Use it when you are about to quote terms, when a lender asks where you see the curve, or when you need to brief an IC quickly. It also helps mid-negotiation. If the market moves, rerun the task and you get an updated read tied to the same objective, with a new as-of date. There is nothing exotic here. No new data sources, no black box scoring. It uses the same benchmarks you already check, organized into a short briefing that respects your time and the deal context. The result is faster calls with fewer loose ends, and a clean artifact you can drop into an email or memo without another pass.