This paper seeks to advance debates about the financialization of housing by focusing on
the emergence of rental housing as a frontier for financialization, a dynamic that is
increasingly relevant since the global financial crisis. Situated in New York City, the research
focuses on an aggressive wave of investment in affordable, rent-stabilized properties by
private equity firms, their efforts to release value from these properties, and the implications
of the 2008 financial crisis for their investment strategies and thus for tenants’ experience of
home. Through detailed empirical analysis tracing the connections between how rental
housing has been constituted as a new site for private equity investment globally, the local
conditions facilitating this process in New York, and how it reshaped everyday life for
tenants, the article theorizes tenants as unwilling subjects of financialization. Yet
unwillingness does not necessarily translate to being overtaken; it also connotes reluctance,
and indeed struggle. This novel conceptualization highlights the ways in which
financialization meets with dissent, and its necessarily contingent and incomplete nature.
The paper therefore moves forward the wider intellectual project of understanding
financialization not as a monolithic and inevitable process, but as one characterized by
resistance from without and contradiction from within
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