Miami Real Estate Investing Podcast With Peter Zalewski

Peter Zalewski

This podcast focuses on identifying buying opportunities and implementing strategies in the volatile South Florida condo markets of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties. Host Peter Zalewski is a former financial journalist and the founder of the Miami Condo Investing Club. Zalewski is a licensed real estate broker, Wall Street analyst and expert witness. This podcast is not authorized by the real estate industry and will probably annoy many of the industry’s talking heads.

  1. Coral Gables Condo Owners Slash Prices To Unload Units As Post-Surfside Costs Climb

    10H AGO

    Coral Gables Condo Owners Slash Prices To Unload Units As Post-Surfside Costs Climb

    In this episode of Miami Condo Mondays™, the hosts also analyze a new Bloomberg report on a foreclosure spike in hard-money loans to speculative flippers in Southwest Florida. Miami Condo Mondays™ is a live podcast hosted by Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ and veteran broker Jenny Huertas of CVRRealty.com providing an in-depth look at the latest residential real estate trends in South Florida. Recorded weekly in Greater Downtown Miami, the podcast offers a one-hour discussion on various real estate topics, including preconstruction condos, market trends and investment strategies. The hosts share their expertise, with Zalewski focusing on macro perspectives and Huertas offering micro insights from her on-the-ground experience. Tune in every Monday at 4 PM (EST) on the social media accounts of Peter Zalewski and Jenny Huertas for insights on the latest trends in the South Florida condo market. Episode Overview In this episode of Miami Condo Mondays™ podcast on Feb. 9, 2026, co-hosts Jenny Huertas‚ the broker-owner of CVR Realty, and Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ discuss the data-driven reality of the Coral Gables condo selloff, where a double-digit drop in the price per square foot is signaling a potential market correction. The report was based on research conducted for the planned Coral Gables Condo Correction Walking Tour™ scheduled for 10 am Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. The conversation explores how Coral Gables—traditionally seen as a stable, Mediterranean-style suburb—is showing signs of significant stress, with Overall and Vintage condo prices falling 12% and 11%, respectively, during the first half of the South Florida Winter Buying Season, according to a recent report. During the 53-minute podcast, Huertas and Zalewski connect the local price drops to a broader national narrative, specifically referencing a breaking Bloomberg report regarding a spike in foreclosures among "hard money" lenders on Florida's Southwest coast. This trend triggered a deep dive into the parallels between the current speculative “fix and flip” climate and the systemic failures depicted in the movie The Big Short, which chronicled the 2008 housing collapse driven by unregulated lending. The hosts analyze how unregulated private financing has created a market without an FDIC backstop, potentially setting the stage for a “memorable” correction after about a 13-year run without a notable downturn. Crucially, the hosts emphasize that this selloff is being accelerated by the post-Surfside legislative landscape and the Florida Condo Association Financial Cliff—a crisis Zalewski predicted back in June 2024. The climbing cost of condo living—fueled by mandatory Structural Integrity Reserve Studies (SIRS) every 10 years, looming Milestone Inspections at a building’s 30-year anniversary and pricey insurance premiums—is no longer sustainable for many, effectively forcing longtime residents to head for the exits. The episode serves as a warning for sellers who remain overconfident and a roadmap for buyers looking to capitalize on the widening spread between asking prices and transaction reality in Coral Gables.

    53 min
  2. Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ Real Estate Podcast For Week Of Feb. 6, 2026

    4D AGO

    Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ Real Estate Podcast For Week Of Feb. 6, 2026

    This is copy of a live podcast recorded Fridays at 4 pm in Miami featuring real estate advisor Daniel Hernandez of Compass Real Estate and analyst Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™. Welcome to Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ weekly podcast for a no-nonsense perspective on South Florida real estate from a pair of locals with differing opinions. Each week, real estate advisor Daniel Hernandez of Compass Real Estate and longtime analyst Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ break down the housing market headlines, unpack policy changes and provide unfiltered analysis on everything from condo terminations to Vintage unit fire sales, luxury speculative homes to developer strategies. Whether you are a homeowner, investor or real estate professional, Hernandez and Zalewski will give a local perspective on what is really happening across the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach with no fluff, no hype and plenty of data-backed opinions. We call balls and strikes on when to buy, sell and hold. Episode Topics For the Feb. 6, 2026, podcast, Hernandez and Zalewski give their take on the following five topics: Aston Martin Maintenance Issues Miami Beach Walks Back Spring Break Austerity Torose On A Tear RFR Stabilizing Biscayne Boulevard Bullish On 29th Street This podcast is broadcast live at 4 pm (EST) on the social media accounts of Daniel Hernandez and Peter Zalewski. Episode Overview In this Feb. 6, 2026, episode of the Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ podcast, Hernandez and Zalewski cut through the local rhetoric, delivering straight talk on five of the biggest topics of critical importance to South Florida investors. The hosts discuss each topic and then announce whether each of them is a Buy, a Sell or a Hold on the issue. Their verdicts often differ, leading to sharp debate on the issue before moving on to the next topic. During the 60-minute discussion, Hernandez and Zalewski analyze the shifting dynamics of the South Florida real estate market as it reaches the halfway point of the Winter Buying Season that stretches from November through April. The Aston Martin Residences serves as a primary case study for the “rookie mistakes” of first-time developers who lock in pre-construction pricing only to be squeezed by post-COVID labor and construction cost spikes. Hernandez points to a press report about a $5 million lawsuit filed by the condo association as a signal of systemic self-dealing, while Zalewski highlights that the building’s $1.70 per square foot maintenance fee is significantly higher than the county average. The conversation shifts to Miami Beach and its attempt to rebrand as a health-focused Blue Zone to distance itself from spring break austerity measures. Zalewski dismisses the move as the wrong marketing approach, citing the historical failure of the Canyon Ranch concept Carl Fisher’s experiences as cautionary tales for those ignoring Miami Beach’s identity as an adult entertainment destination. The discussion then explores Toros Equities and its recent $28 million “gain” in one year by flipping a Coconut Grove office building originally acquired through foreclosure. This “running and gunning” success is contrasted with a retail play on Lincoln Road, where the hosts argue that landlords must abandon luxury-only strategies and adopt an affordability model to reset after massive value drops. A looming supply-demand crisis is identified in Greater Downtown Miami’s Central Business District submarket, where 4,300 new units are currently under construction on a base of just 10,200 existing condos. Hernandez and Zalewski agree that as prices in this core peak and inventory swells, the affordability and physical barrier of the beach will likely spark a “reversal of fortunes” for savvy investors seeking Vintage condos at a 52% discount.

    1 hr
  3. Is Bankruptcy Court Best Way For Bulk Buyers To Target Miami's Distressed Condo Associations?

    5D AGO

    Is Bankruptcy Court Best Way For Bulk Buyers To Target Miami's Distressed Condo Associations?

    In this episode of Condo Capitalism™, real estate expert Jack McCabe of McCabeResearch.com discusses how differing price opinions make condo terminations difficult for troubled associations. Condo Capitalism™ is a weekly podcast hosted by Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ that provides data-driven analysis on distressed real estate—foreclosures, shortsales and bank-owned REOs—in the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach. The program tracks the Florida Condo Association Financial Cliff, where rising maintenance fees, special assessments and insurance costs are squeezing cash-strapped owners. On the show, experts analyze how the national “two-sided risk”—rising inflation and falling employment—magnifies these local pressures, potentially forcing a capitulation by owners who can no longer afford condo living. Join Peter Zalewski at MiamiCondo.Club for a livestream every weekday at 4 pm (Miami time). On-demand recordings of all shows are available here. Episode Overview In the Feb. 5, 2026, episode of the Condo Capitalism™ podcast, host Peter Zalewski interviews veteran real estate expert Jack McCabe of McCabeResearch.com regarding why bankruptcy court could become the primary venue for investors to acquire distressed condo associations that are unable to navigate the traditional termination process. Zalewski cites what looks to be an emerging trend for this shift, pointing to a Delray Beach 55-and-older condo community facing $40 million in debt and the recent Chapter 11 filing of a mixed-use project in Boca Raton as evidence of what could be a mounting crisis. McCabe explains that as insurance and reserve requirements skyrocket, many associations will find that filing for bankruptcy is the only viable path forward for buildings that can no longer meet their financial obligations. A critical takeaway from the exchange is that the South Florida condo market has reached a financial stalemate where the cost of mandatory structural repairs and insurance has outpaced the valuation of many Vintage buildings, effectively forcing the market toward a new phase of bankruptcy filings. The conversation added color regarding the 30-year Milestone Inspections and the Structural Integrity Reserve Studies (SIRS)—conducted every 10 years—which are acting as a financial “one-two punch” for associations. While the Milestone Inspection identifies immediate, big-ticket repairs that often trigger a massive special assessment, the SIRS creates a strict savings plan that can permanently hike monthly maintenance fees. This shift effectively ends the era of low monthly dues by forcing owners to catch up on years of neglected maintenance through a combination of lump-sum payments and higher monthly fees. Zalewski said this environment creates a stalemate where individual owners often hold unrealistic price expectations, while McCabe predicts developers will pivot toward court-supervised auctions to bypass these holdouts and secure distressed assets. Beyond the legal battlegrounds, the discussion delved into the stark reality of the 2026 South Florida Winter Buying Season. Overall inventory levels in Greater Downtown Miami reached 20.1 months of supply while condo prices fell 7.2% per square foot on a Year-over-Year basis.

    1h 25m
  4. 39% Of South Beach Condo Projects Contend With Heightened Levels Of Resale Listings

    5D AGO

    39% Of South Beach Condo Projects Contend With Heightened Levels Of Resale Listings

    In this episode of Miami Condo Mondays™, the hosts explore growing buying opportunities as cash-strapped owners increasingly head for the exits as the cost of South Beach condo living is skyrocketing. Miami Condo Mondays™ is a live podcast hosted by Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ and veteran broker Jenny Huertas of CVRRealty.com providing an in-depth look at the latest residential real estate trends in South Florida. Recorded weekly in Greater Downtown Miami, the podcast offers a one-hour discussion on various real estate topics, including preconstruction condos, market trends and investment strategies. The hosts share their expertise, with Zalewski focusing on macro perspectives and Huertas offering micro insights from her on-the-ground experience. Tune in every Monday at 4 PM (EST) on the social media accounts of Peter Zalewski and Jenny Huertas for insights on the latest trends in the South Florida condo market. Episode Overview In this episode of Miami Condo Mondays™ podcast on Feb. 2, 2026, co-hosts Jenny Huertas‚ the broker-owner of CVR Realty, and Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ analyzed the shifting dynamics of the South Beach marketplace. A key revelation to emerge from the discussion is that 15% of South Beach projects are now listed for resale at prices below their transaction levels during the South Florida Summer Buying Season that stretched from May through October. During the 68-minute episode, Huertas noted many unit owners are attempting to sell to escape the financial pressure of mandatory Structural Integrity Reserve Studies (SIRS) and Milestone Inspections that have triggered rising maintenance fees and significant special assessments required to be funded starting in 2026. The South Beach condo market is currently split between high priced new construction and Vintage units that offer a 52% discount compared to the Overall market average, according to a recent report. Nearly two out of every three condos in South Beach are at least 30 years old and must now comply with post Surfside legislation requiring regular structural checkups and reserve funding. The current study found that 39% of the condo projects in South Beach—defined as Government Cut north to 41st street, and the Atlantic Ocean west to Biscayne Bay—have an above-average level—at least 6.0%—of units listed for resale. Zalewski said unit owners who do not adjust their pricing during the traditionally busy South Florida Winter Buying Season of November through April risk holding their units through the hurricane season when buyer traffic and marketability typically decline. Investors are finding the South Beach area—which was supplanted by Greater Downtown Miami for the last decade—increasingly unattractive as the median asking rent of $3,300 and existing sales prices result in a negligible basic—or going-in—cap rate of 0.4%. The lack of a potential cap rate is creating a scenario where the only way for the South Beach condo market to clear the existing 15.3 months of supply is through a significant reduction in asking prices. Some savvy buyers are now finding units that adhere to the “1% Rule” of real estate investing as a compass to identify units that are priced at a level where the monthly rent can actually support the acquisition cost. The supply pressure is expected to grow as the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach reaches the symbolic halfway point of the Winter Buying Season during the Presidents Day holiday on Feb. 16, 2026. Traditionally, the Coconut Grove Arts Festival and the Miami Beach International Boat Show—which are annually held during the Presidents Day holiday weekend—have represented the symbolic halfway point of the South Florida Winter Buying Season. This is typically a time when condo sellers reassess their marketing strategies to cash in the remaining weeks of the Winter Buying Season.

    1h 8m
  5. Miami's Community News Trades Printing Presses For Digital Platforms To Connect People

    5D AGO

    Miami's Community News Trades Printing Presses For Digital Platforms To Connect People

    In this episode of The Peter Zalewski Show™, Publisher Michael Miller explains why embracing technological changes has allowed Miami's Community News to pursue its mission since 1958. The weekly podcast The Peter Zalewski Show™ features interviews with South Florida business leaders focused on real estate, finance and the economy. The program - hosted by Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ - is broadcast live every Wednesday at 4 pm (Miami time) at MiamiCondo.Club and on Peter Zalewski’s social media accounts to watch the free live broadcasts. The objective of the show is to deliver straight talk, share institutional knowledge and provide data-driven analysis on the macro and micro economic forces shaping the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach. Episode Overview In the Feb. 4, 2026, episode of The Peter Zalewski Show™ podcast, host Peter Zalewski interviews Michael Miller—Publisher and Executive Editor of Miami’s Community News—about the proactive evolution of a family media legacy into the digital age. This deep dive examines how transitioning from legacy ink to digital platforms allows the organization to fulfill its historical role in a community defined by rapid growth. During the 62-minute discussion, Miller and Zalewski provide a masterclass on how institutional knowledge serves as the primary defense against the short-sighted nature of social media. The discussion centers on the success of independent journalism and the specific economic hurdles facing the South Florida business community. Miller adds color to the conversation by recounting his early days delivering papers in a family Impala and the emotional weight of shutting down the company’s legacy printing presses. The conversation explores Miller’s function as a community matchmaker by measuring the physical response of the public to local events and political figures. Miller explains that he gauges the popularity and viability of trends based on how long people linger after a speech or the speed of RSVP responses for specific guests. He describes Miami’s Community News as a living laboratory where serving as a matchmaker for government officials, business owners and residents provides a more accurate pulse than traditional digital metrics. The dialogue shifts to the practical integration of AI within this human-centric editorial workflow. Miller said he views AI as a sophisticated tool for organization and efficiency though he maintains that human oversight is essential to preserve the authentic voice required of a community matchmaker. This technological evolution allows independent publishers to distribute their local insights with a level of speed that was previously reserved for major legacy organizations. Economic reality takes center stage as Miller analyzes the widening affordability gap currently impacting Miami-Dade County. The discussion explores how rising labor costs and insurance premiums are placing significant pressure on the small business owners who form the backbone of the local economy. Miller said he sees a stark divide between the ultra-wealthy and the struggling middle class, noting that his instincts suggest a period of prolonged struggle for those caught in the middle. The podcast wraps up with an examination of the enduring value of historical archives and institutional knowledge in a fragmented media landscape. As hedge fund ownership continues to impact the depth of investigative reporting at major newspapers, independent local outlets are increasingly responsible for maintaining community accountability. Miller emphasizes that consistent marketing and local physical engagement are the only reliable methods for building long-term trust in a digital world.

    1h 3m
  6. Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ Real Estate Podcast For Week Of Jan. 30, 2026

    FEB 2

    Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ Real Estate Podcast For Week Of Jan. 30, 2026

    Welcome to Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ weekly podcast for a no-nonsense perspective on South Florida real estate from a pair of locals with differing opinions. Each week, real estate advisor Daniel Hernandez of Compass Real Estate and longtime analyst Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ break down the housing market headlines, unpack policy changes and provide unfiltered analysis on everything from condo terminations to Vintage unit fire sales, luxury speculative homes to developer strategies. Whether you are a homeowner, investor or real estate professional, Hernandez and Zalewski will give a local perspective on what is really happening across the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach with no fluff, no hype and plenty of data-backed opinions. We call balls and strikes on when to buy, sell and hold. Episode Topics For the Jan. 30, 2026, podcast, Hernandez and Zalewski give their take on the following five topics: Miami Wins Top Spot For Homebuyers Ken Billions Is Moving Dirt? Swire Properties USA Top Dog Is Out! Regalia Auction Do-Over YIGBY This podcast is broadcast live at 4 pm (EST) on the social media accounts of Daniel Hernandez and Peter Zalewski. Episode Overview In this Jan. 30, 2026, episode of the Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ podcast, Hernandez and Zalewski cut through the local rhetoric, delivering straight talk on five of the biggest topics of critical importance to South Florida investors. The hosts discuss each topic and then announce whether each of them is a Buy, a Sell or a Hold on the issue. Their verdicts often differ, leading to sharp debate on the issue before moving on to the next topic. During the 62-minute discussion, Hernandez and Zalewski dive into into the shifting power dynamics of the South Florida market as 2026 begins to reveal which players are holding "dry powder" and which are simply moving dirt to save face. The conversation maneuvers through the paradox of rising pending sales against a backdrop of surging inventory, questioning whether recent interest rate cuts have finally provided enough "wiggle room" to break the long-standing logjam between buyers and sellers. The duo analyzes the high-stakes "do-over" of a Biscayne Boulevard development site auction in Greater Downtown Miami and scrutinizes the $768 million war chest of Swire Properties at a moment of a leadership transition. From the scrutiny of billionaire Ken Griffin’s latest construction filings to the speculative future of the 72-acre Mercy Hospital site, the dialogue separates the spin vs. reality of the Miami housing market. It is a no-nonsense assessment of legislative gridlock and the Condo Cliff facing condo owners that leaves the listener wondering if the market is finally recalibrating or if the biggest shoes have yet to drop.

    1h 2m
  7. South Florida General Contractors Scramble To Navigate New Labor, Tariff Reality

    JAN 30

    South Florida General Contractors Scramble To Navigate New Labor, Tariff Reality

    In this episode of Condo Capitalism™, general contractor Kevin Calienes discusses the current state of the South Florida construction industry where some laborers are asking as much as $300 per day. Condo Capitalism™ is a weekly podcast hosted by Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ that provides data-driven analysis on distressed real estate—foreclosures, shortsales and bank-owned REOs—in the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach. The program tracks the Florida Condo Association Financial Cliff, where rising maintenance fees, special assessments and insurance costs are squeezing cash-strapped owners. On the show, experts analyze how the national “two-sided risk”—rising inflation and falling employment—magnifies these local pressures, potentially forcing a capitulation by owners who can no longer afford condo living. Join Peter Zalewski at MiamiCondo.Club for a livestream every weekday at 4 pm (Miami time). On-demand recordings of all shows are available here. Episode Overview In the Jan. 29, 2026, episode of the Condo Capitalism™ podcast, host Peter Zalewski interviews general contractor Kevin Calienes of Khaos Construction in Coral Gables regarding the intensifying financial pressures facing South Florida development sites. The discussion centers on a market where laborers realizing they are in great demand are now asking for more money, with some setting a new $300 daily labor floor for skilled trades. While existing fixed-price contracts force general contractors to absorb the brunt of rising material tariffs, new project proposals are undergoing a necessary recalibration to reflect 2026 prices. During the 62-minute discussion, Calienes details a landscape where the cost of essential building materials like copper wiring has more than tripled, forcing a shift in how contractors bid and budget for future developments. The reality of building in Miami is changing as the basic costs for workers and supplies seem to move higher every month. Homeowners and developers are finding that the old prices they used to pay for simple renovations or new houses are disappearing. A shrinking pool of available laborers has turned traditional masonry into a bottleneck that is now too slow and too expensive for the local market. As fewer workers are available to lay heavy concrete blocks, project timelines are stretching and costs are rising. To keep projects moving along, Calienes said he is increasingly recommending faster, high-tech ways to build that require less manpower. This inflationary environment is driving a shift toward alternative building technologies like Insulated Concrete Form (ICF) systems, which replace traditional masonry with high-efficiency foam and concrete bunkers. The method allows a three-man crew to erect a 2,000 square foot structure in roughly four weeks. Traditional concrete block construction often requires two months or more to reach the same point in the construction. While these materials carry a 10% to 15% price premium, owners move in much sooner since the process skips several time-consuming government inspections. An added bonus for clients opting for these high-efficiency homes is the reported drop in power bills by about half. Calienes also cited reports of insurance costs falling significantly for these structures. One client reportedly saw his annual insurance premium fall from $19,000 to about $10,000. Switching to these smart materials is a way for the local building industry to stay competitive as the cost of labor and traditional supplies discover a price ceiling in South Florida.

    1h 2m
  8. Is Greater Downtown Miami's Record Growth Driving Residents Back To South Beach?

    JAN 29

    Is Greater Downtown Miami's Record Growth Driving Residents Back To South Beach?

    In this episode of The Peter Zalewski Show™, commercial real estate advisor Kevin Krueger explains how the mainland's congestion and costs now make South Beach a more livable alternative. The weekly podcast The Peter Zalewski Show™ features interviews with South Florida business leaders focused on real estate, finance and the economy. The program - hosted by Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ - is broadcast live every Wednesday at 4 pm (Miami time) at MiamiCondo.Club and on Peter Zalewski’s social media accounts to watch the free live broadcasts. The objective of the show is to deliver straight talk, share institutional knowledge and provide data-driven analysis on the macro and micro economic forces shaping the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach. Episode Overview In the Jan. 28, 2026, episode of The Peter Zalewski Show™ podcast, host Peter Zalewski interviews Kevin Krueger, a commercial real estate advisor with Rise Realty, about how record growth and congestion in Greater Downtown Miami are driving quality-of-life-oriented residents back to South Beach. During the 68-minute episode, Krueger explains how the mainland's record costs now make the barrier island a more livable alternative for projects that combine housing, offices and shops. This shift reveals signs of a migration away from Greater Downtown Miami as residents seek to escape the high costs and congestion of the mainland’s urban core. The discussion offers a rare look at how South Beach is leveraging its historical charm and new transit "cheat codes" to outpace the newer neighborhoods across Biscayne Bay. South Beach—defined as Government Cut north to 41st Street, and the Atlantic Ocean west to Biscayne Bay—is reclaiming its status as a primary destination for residents who are tired of the mainland’s "concrete jungle" and rising expenses. Zalewski suggested that South Beach might come roaring back as a result of Greater Downtown Miami being too successful with its pricing, making the barrier island an increasingly attractive alternative. While the Brickell Avenue Area remains a massive financial hub, its 10% office vacancy rate suggests a cooling trend compared to suburban markets like Coral Gables and Coconut Grove, where vacancies have tightened to 5.0% and 3.0%, respectively. Krueger points out that as the mainland becomes a victim of its own success, the barrier island offers a more established lifestyle that newer neighborhoods like Edgewater or Wynwood simply cannot replicate. Class A office rates in Miami’s urban core have climbed from $55 some nine years ago to an average of up to $110 per square foot, while top-tier trophy assets now command between $125 and $200 per square foot. The South Beach market is uniquely positioned to serve these high-end users through boutique office spaces, typically requiring spaces between 2,000 and 8,000 square feet. This creates a specialized environment where executives can live and work within a 15-minute radius, supported by Miami Beach’s concierge programs to speed up the business permitting process. Retail on Lincoln Road has transitioned toward major international brands as lease rates hit $225 per square foot. This high-rent environment has effectively pushed out smaller industrial uses, making warehouse space virtually non-existent as old bays are converted into small shops and sleek office galleries. Krueger notes that South Beach’s maturation is being accelerated by infrastructure like the water taxi, which is designed to remove the frustration of traveling between the barrier island and the mainland.

    1h 8m

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About

This podcast focuses on identifying buying opportunities and implementing strategies in the volatile South Florida condo markets of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties. Host Peter Zalewski is a former financial journalist and the founder of the Miami Condo Investing Club. Zalewski is a licensed real estate broker, Wall Street analyst and expert witness. This podcast is not authorized by the real estate industry and will probably annoy many of the industry’s talking heads.

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