Episodios

  • First Draft Live: TruAmerica Multifamily President & CEO Bob Hart — Is This Multifamily's Moment Of Truth?
    Apr 10 2026

    Multifamily is under pressure from every direction, and yet it is still expected to fix America's housing crisis.

    A record wave of new supply has hit the market, pushing vacancy higher and rent growth flat or negative in several Sun Belt metros. At the same time, Washington is turning up the heat, with voices like Sen. Elizabeth Warren targeting institutional ownership and the Federal Trade Commission applying new scrutiny to rental fees.

    But with the bulk of the supply tsunami behind us, could 2026 be the turnaround year? Or will it be just another step in a longer reset?

    On this episode of First Draft Live, Bisnow sits down with Bob Hart, president and CEO of TruAmerica Multifamily, to break down where the market actually stands, where capital is flowing and how investors are making the math work in a sector caught between rising pressure and uncertain recovery.

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    29 m
  • First Draft Live: Peachtree Managing Principal & CEO Greg Friedman — Iran Conflict's Capital Markets Impact
    Mar 18 2026

    This was supposed to be commercial real estate’s year.


    The industry entered 2026 expecting interest rates to fall, liquidity to rise, and for long-stalled transactions to finally put the pedal to the metal. For a while, it seemed as though CRE would finally be experiencing a true recovery from the massive hit it took during the pandemic.


    But today, things are looking a little shakier.


    Global instability surrounding the escalating conflict between the U.S. and Iran has escalated tariff and trade tensions. Meanwhile, $1.2T in real estate loans are expected to mature by 2027, a significant amount of which were originated when borrowing costs were much lower.


    On this episode, Greg Friedman, CEO of Peachtree Group, one of the most active private credit platforms in CRE, breaks down the impacts as it stands today.

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    31 m
  • First Draft Live: CEO of Matthews Kyle Matthews — Brokerages vs. AI
    Mar 6 2026

    This episode of First Draft Live is presented by Agora.

    The meteoric rise of artificial intelligence has impacted every industry, including the notoriously tech-adverse commercial real estate world.
    Scores of new AI-driven tools have left brokers sweating over their commissions and wondering if they will be replaced by software that can automate underwriting and surface buyers instantly. And shareholders have been ditching their brokerage stock over concerns the entire business model is at risk. Are their fears overblown, or should brokers be preparing themselves for a future where AI could take their jobs?
    Both can be true, Kyle Matthews, CEO of Matthews CRE, said on this week’s episode.
    “I absolutely think there is an overreaction happening,” Matthews said. “And I think there are 100% vulnerabilities, and the nature and the shape of how these services are performed in the next three, five and 10 years, fundamentally, will change.”

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    30 m
  • First Draft Live: CEO of Continental Properties James Schloemer — Congress Finally Faces The Housing Math
    Feb 20 2026

    This episode is presented by Agora.
    The federal government is poised to enact legislation to make housing development easier.
    But federal desire does not always translate to local action — and that is where construction actually happens, said Continental Properties Chairman and CEO James Schloemer, who just concluded a two-year term as chairman of the National Multifamily Housing Council.
    “There are a lot of issues at the local level,” he said. “Between NIMBYs, ... issues regarding building codes and being [too] short-staffed to expedite the necessary permitting and inspections, there are a lot of challenges not correlated to things that the federal government influences.”

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    33 m
  • First Draft Live: BGO Managing Director & Head of US Debt Abbe Franchot Borok — What Your Investment Committee Wishes You Knew
    Jan 23 2026

    This episode of First Draft Live is presented by Agora.


    Venezuela, Greenland, Canada’s prime minister calling the death of America as global leader. Interest rate watching, Fed independence under question, tariffs.


    There’s a lot of noise out there in the macroeconomy that can make it hard for CRE to tune into a good deal.


    And yet Abbe Franchot Borok, BGO managing director and head of U.S. debt, said she is optimistic the year ahead will be a good one for property investment.


    Sure, it has gotten more complicated and the industry has had to turn to new inputs and data sources. The normal supply vs. demand dynamic is changing as consumer use of commercial real estate has shifted.


    And yes, she said, Canadian and European investors are not liking what they are seeing out of the U.S. government.


    But the U.S. continues to be the most liquid and active market in the world, and she doesn’t see a sustained lack of investment in the cards. Good deals are out there for those willing to double down on income generation and executing the business plan on the ground.

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    33 m
  • First Draft Live: CBRE Global Client Strategist & Senior Economic Advisor Spencer Levy — CRE Wrapped 2025
    Dec 19 2025

    2025 was a noisy year.

    Policy changes, interest rate adjustments and geopolitical roller coasters kept CRE on their toes.
    With financing loosening up and transactions picking up, the groundwork is being laid for a better 2026, but where is a safe investment in a world where fundamentals seem to be shifting?

    CBRE Global Client Strategist and Senior Economic Advisor Spencer Levy said he advises his clients to wade through the noise and look at the drivers in New York, San Francisco, Dallas, Miami and the Midwest to really see what’s on the horizon for CRE.

    These include the reshoring of manufacturing and the train from Mexico to Canada, which carries nearly $2T in trade each year.

    “You follow that durable demand driver, that infrastructure, despite some of the tariff noise, despite some of the trade noise, despite some of the political changes — that’s the time to find opportunity,” Levy said.

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    42 m
  • First Draft Live: Northwood Retail President Ward Kampf- America’s Shopping Hard. So Why Is Retail Still Sweating?
    Dec 5 2025

    This holiday season is one filled with contradictions for retail real estate. Consumer confidence has plummeted, but their spending is at all-time highs. Leasing is bustling and vacancy is tight, but store closures are outpacing openings.On this episode, Northwood Retail President Ward Kampf joins the show to unpack the uncertainty surrounding the asset class, which has also been deeply impact by tariffs, artificial intelligence and vast changes in behavior between generations.Young kids today, they eat different and don’t drink as much as we did when we were young,” he said on the show. “They are much healthier than we were. We ate whatever we wanted and drank a lot.”Kampf also discusses what is expected to be a bumpy 2026, predicting even more closures, potential drugstore bankruptcy and backlash to $20 salads and burritos.“The key word going forward, doesn’t matter your political slant, right or left, is affordability,” he said. “People are really conscious of that.”

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    32 m
  • First Draft Live: Linneman Associates Principal and Founder Peter Linneman — Uncertainty Is The New Normal. Now What?
    Nov 21 2025

    2025 has not gone according to plan.

    Real estate has been bandied about by headwinds of economic, policy and fundamental changes. Interest rate reductions and rising deal flow has the industry feeling better, but stability is a pipe dream these days, especially when federal data is missing and CRE research can conflict.

    But forget about the data, economist Peter Linneman said on this week’s show — how is it really going in your apartments or your office building?

    He said CRE has gotten hooked on data analysis and has forgotten that what really matters are the fundamentals on the ground.
    And while he agrees that uncertainty is the new normal, and that’s trouble for CRE, “people adjust.”

    He foresees a meaningful return to transactions in 2026.
    “There are people out there with courage, but they don’t have capital. And there are others out there whose short investment horizons have made them understandably and correctly not courageous,” he said.
    “But when everybody else starts jumping, it’ll be like the wildebeests crossing the river. They all jump in.”

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    39 m