You know the routine. Before a refi call or an IC discussion, you pull SOFR, check the Treasury curve, glance at swaps, then try to frame what it means for the deal. It is repetitive, and it rarely fits the exact decision in front of you. The friction is not finding data. It is turning data into a clear view of what matters now for this asset, this loan, this moment. That translation eats time and still leaves room for second guessing. Research ~5 min to run Pull Interest Rate Benchmark Report Vic prompt Use Vic to pull an interest rate benchmark report for refinancing a 250,000 sf office asset. Purpose Gives financing and investment decisions current market context without spending 30 minutes pulling and formatting data. Inputs Rate Check Purpose Required Outputs A concise in-chat briefing with current rates, curve commentary, decision implications, and a rate table. Time saved Turns roughly 30 minutes of manual work into about five minutes. How it works You give Vic one input: the purpose of the rate check. Loan sizing, a refinance, a hedging call, or prep for a committee memo. The framing matters because the output is not a generic market recap. It is built around the decision you need to make. The run line is simple: Use Vic to pull an interest rate benchmark report for refinancing a 250,000 sf office asset. Swap in your situation and go. Vic pulls current benchmark rates and returns a short, in chat briefing. You get key levels for SOFR, Treasuries, and swaps, each with clear as of dates so you know how fresh the read is. A compact table lays out the rates cleanly, handy if you need to drop numbers into a model or memo. Beyond the numbers, the task gives you the shape of the curve and how it has moved. That is where people lose time when they do this by hand. You bounce between sources and try to decide if the curve has steepened, flattened, or shifted in a way that matters. Here, the read is written in plain language. The last piece makes it more than a data pull. The briefing ties the rate backdrop to your stated purpose. If you are sizing a loan, it shows how current benchmarks affect proceeds and structure. If you are looking at a refi, it connects today’s rates to likely execution and risk. If you are weighing a hedge, it points to what the curve and recent moves suggest for timing and structure. There are no extra integrations or setup steps. Run the prompt, wait a few minutes, and get a response you can use right away. It is concise enough to read quickly and complete enough to support a real decision or a client call. This task sounds small until you count how often you do it. Rates move, deals keep coming, and each one needs a current view. Saving 25 minutes each time, with a cleaner read, is an easy trade. It also standardizes how your team talks about the market. Everyone works from the same frame: current levels, curve shape, recent changes, and direct implications. That consistency shows up in memos, calls, and negotiations. Less time arguing about what the market is doing, more time deciding what to do about it.