You are halfway through a lease review and the clock is working against you. The headline economics are clear, but the real risk sits in the back half of the document where termination and reduction rights live. Miss one clause and your projected cash flow can swing in a way that matters. Catch those rights early and you get a clean IC memo. Miss them and you are scrambling at the end. Due Diligence ~5 min to run Abstract Termination Rights from Lease Vic prompt Use Vic to abstract the termination rights from this commercial lease. Purpose Surface termination risks that can alter NOI and valuation assumptions before they reach the model. Reduces manual lease review from roughly 20 minutes to about 5 minutes. Inputs Commercial Lease Required Additional Context Optional Outputs A two-page Word memo that includes a termination-risk summary, underwriting notes on cash flow effects, and a schedule listing every right with trigger, notice period, fee, and cure window. Time saved Cuts manual lease review from roughly 20 minutes to about 5 minutes. How it works Give Vic the lease. That is the only input. You can add context if you want, but you do not have to. Then run: Use Vic to abstract the termination rights from this commercial lease. Vic reads the full document and pulls every tenant right to terminate early or reduce obligations before the stated expiration. Each right is identified and tagged by impact so you can see what matters. The output is a two page Word memo that drops into an underwriting package. It opens with a termination risk summary that flags the clauses most likely to affect value. Then it moves into underwriting notes that tie each right to cash flow. If a tenant can walk, cut rent, or change obligations, you see how that flows through to NOI. You also get a clean schedule of every right. Each entry lists the trigger, notice period, any fee, and the cure window. That schedule is the table you will use when you build or check a model. This is not just extraction. It adds structure and a point of view. Leases often include several rights that look similar but carry very different economic weight. By classifying impact and tying it to underwriting, the memo keeps attention on the clauses that can move value. This replaces a manual read that often takes about twenty minutes for a standard lease. The task runs in about five minutes and produces something you can use without reformatting. For teams reviewing multiple leases in a deal, the time savings compound. There is also a consistency gain. Different analysts read leases differently, especially under time pressure. A standard memo with the same fields and structure makes comparisons across tenants and assets easier. Senior review is faster because the information shows up in the same place each time. Use it early in diligence. Run it as soon as you have the lease so termination risk is visible before you lock assumptions. If something looks material, adjust the model or dig into the clause while there is still time to act. It is a simple task, aimed at a common source of error. Termination rights are easy to miss and expensive to ignore. This makes them hard to miss and straightforward to use.