TITLE:
Institutional Capital and Affordability in New York City Housing: Manhattan and the Bronx Since 2008
AUTHORS:
Kai Woo, Joon Lee
KEYWORDS:
Institutional Capital, Private Equity, Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), Housing Affordability, Manhattan, Bronx, Subprime Mortgage Crisis, Vacancy Rates, Rent Burden, Displacement, Housing Policy, New York City Housing Crisis
JOURNAL NAME:
Current Urban Studies,
Vol.13 No.4,
December
25,
2025
ABSTRACT: This paper investigates how institutional capital has reshaped the housing landscape in New York City, focusing on Manhattan and the Bronx since the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis. Following the crisis, private equity firms, real estate investment trusts (REITs), and asset managers rapidly expanded their presence in Manhattan, acquiring large-scale developments and consolidating ownership. This shift transformed housing into a financial asset, producing luxury-driven redevelopment while heightening tenant displacement and rent burdens. In contrast, the Bronx maintained more fragmented, small-scale ownership patterns, yet still faced affordability stress through limited credit access, overcrowding, and severe rent burdens. Drawing on case studies, ownership data, and quantitative analysis of vacancy rates and rental burdens, the study demonstrates that both corporate concentration in Manhattan and dispersed ownership in the Bronx ultimately yielded similar outcomes: persistent scarcity and widespread housing insecurity. Policy responses such as the 2019 Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act, Mandatory Inclusionary Housing, and 421-a tax incentives provided partial remedies, but failed to bridge the gap between capital investment and long-term affordability. The findings suggest that only a comprehensive rethinking of public investment in housing can address New York’s enduring affordability crisis.