Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ Real Estate Podcast For Week Of Nov. 28, 2025
Description
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 Nov. 28, 2025, podcast, Hernandez and Zalewski give their take on the following five topics:
This podcast is broadcast live at 4 pm (EST) on the social media accounts of Daniel Hernandez and Peter Zalewski.
Episode Overview
In this Nov. 28, 2025, episode of Buy, Sell, Hold Miami™ podcast, Hernandez and Zalewski cut through the local rhetoric, delivering straight talk on six pivotal market 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.
The 64-minute episode—recorded on Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025, in anticipation of the Thanksgiving holiday weekend—offered a vigorous debate between real estate advisor Daniel Hernandez of Compass Real Estate in Coconut Grove and longtime condo analyst Peter Zalewski.
The conversation kicked off with an examination of the Miami-Dade College Board of Trustees’ controversial decision to offer a prime downtown parcel, valued by Zalewski at $368 million, to the Trump Library Foundation at no cost.
This issue continues to vex investors, given the site’s generous zoning, which allows for 1,000 units per acre and zero required parking spaces, potentially allowing a sellout north of $5 billion.
Both hosts heavily criticized the decision, citing the land’s original purpose—to fund the college’s mission—and the political optics of placing a non-immigration-friendly library across from the historic Freedom Tower.
Zalewski opposed the transfer at zero cost, arguing the college must receive the cash value, while Hernandez strongly opposed the free transfer, suggesting a minimum $400 million valuation.














