Across
Europe, the financial sector has pushed up house prices. It’s a political
timebomb
Tim White
We’ve
been living in a great experiment: can finance provide basic human rights such
as housing? The answer is increasingly no
Mon 7 Jul
2025 05.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jul/07/europe-financial-sector-house-prices-politics
“The
housing crisis is now as big a threat to the EU as Russia,” Jaume Collboni, the
mayor of Barcelona, recently declared. “We’re running the risk of having the
working and middle classes conclude that their democracies are incapable of
solving their biggest problem.”
It is not
hard to see where Collboni is coming from. From Dublin to Milan, residents
routinely find half of their incomes swallowed up by rent, and home ownership
is unthinkable for most. Major cities are witnessing spiralling house prices
and some have jaw-dropping year-on-year median rent increases of more than 10%.
People are being pushed into ever more precarious and cramped conditions and
homelessness is rapidly rising.
As
Collboni asserts, housing lies at the heart of surging political
disfranchisement across mainland Europe. The crisis is fuelling the far right –
linked, for example, to the support for Alternative für Deutschland in Germany
and the recent victory of the Dutch anti-Islam Freedom party. Housing has
become a primary engine of inequality, reinforcing divisions between the
asset-haves and have-nots and disproportionately affecting minority groups. Far
from offering security and safety, for many in Europe housing is now a primary
cause of suffering and despair.
But not
everyone is suffering. At the same time it is robbing normal people of a
comfortable and dignified life, the housing crisis is lining the pockets of a
small number of individuals and institutions. Across Europe in recent decades
the same story has unfolded, albeit in very different ways: power has shifted
to those who profit from housing, and away from those who live in it.
The most
striking manifestation of this shift is the large-scale ownership and control
of homes by financial institutions, particularly since the 2008 global
financial crisis. In 2023, $1.7tn of global real estate was managed by
institutional investors such as private equity firms, insurance companies,
hedge funds, banks and pension funds, up from $385bn in 2008. Spurred by loose
monetary policy, these actors consider Europe’s housing a particularly
lucrative and secure “asset class”. Purchases of residential property in the
euro area by institutional investors tripled over the past decade. As a
London-based asset manager puts it: “Real estate investors with exposure to
European residential assets are the cats that got the cream,” with housing
generating “stronger risk-adjusted returns than any other sector”.
The scale
of institutional ownership in certain places is staggering. In Ireland, nearly
half of all units delivered since 2017 were purchased by investment funds.
Across Sweden, the share of private rental apartments with institutional
investors as landlords has swelled to 24%. In Berlin, €40bn of housing assets
are now in institutional portfolios, 10% of the total housing stock. In the
four largest Dutch cities, a quarter of homes for sale in recent years were
purchased by investors. Even in Vienna, a city widely heralded for its vast,
subsidised housing stock, institutional players are now invested in every 10th
housing unit and 42% of new private rental homes.
Not all
investors are the same. But when the aim is to make money from housing it can
mean only one thing: prices go up. As Leilani Farha, a former UN special
rapporteur, points out, investment funds have a “fiduciary duty” to maximise
returns to shareholders, which often include the pension funds on which
ordinary people rely. They therefore do all they can to increase prices and
reduce expenditure, including via “renoviction” (using refurbishment as an
excuse to hike rents), under-maintenance and the introduction of punitive fees.
When the private equity giant Blackstone acquired and renovated homes across
Stockholm, it increased rents on some of the homes by up to 50%, the economic
geographer Brett Christophers found. “Green” retrofits in the name of sustainability
are also an increasingly common tactic.
The
corporate capture of our homes has not sprung out of thin air. Decades of
housing market privatisation, liberalisation and speculation have enabled the
financial sector to tighten its grip on European households. From the 1980s in
places such as Italy, Sweden and Germany, government-owned apartments were
transferred en masse to the private market. In Berlin, for example, vast
bundles of public housing were sold overnight to large corporations. In one
single transaction, Deutsche Wohnen purchased 60,000 flats from the city in
2006 for €450m; just €7,500 per apartment.
With the
role of welfare states in housing provision dismantled, many countries reached
for demand-side interventions such as liberalising mortgage credit. This
fuelled widespread speculation, pushed up house prices and encouraged extreme
levels of household indebtedness. The resulting financial crisis of 2008
provided fresh opportunities for investors. Countries such as Spain, Greece,
Portugal and Ireland became a treasure trove of “distressed” assets and
mortgage debt that could be scooped up at bargain prices. Despite the
widespread devastation caused by the crisis, Europe’s dependence on the
financial sector for housing solutions only intensified in the years that
followed.
As power
has shifted to investors and speculators, and governments have become ever more
reliant on them, so it has been withdrawn from residents. In order to
incentivise or “de-risk” private investment, governments across Europe have
weakened tenant protections, slashed planning regulations and building
standards, and offered special subsidies, grants and tax breaks for entities
such as real estate investment trusts. One group in particular has borne the
brunt of this: renters. Renters have seen their rents skyrocket, living
conditions deteriorate and their security undermined. In Europe, some
investment funds have directly driven the displacement of lower-income tenants
and overseen disruptive evictions.
Powerful
financial actors have done a great job at framing themselves as the solution
to, rather than the cause of, the prevailing crisis. They have incessantly
pushed the now-dominant narrative that more real estate investment is a good
thing because it will increase the supply of much-needed homes. Blackstone, for
example, claims to play a “positive role in addressing the chronic undersupply
of housing across the continent”. But the evidence suggests that greater
involvement of financial markets has not increased aggregate home ownership or
housing supply, but instead inflated house prices and rents.
The thing
is, institutional investors aren’t really into producing housing. It is
directly against their interests to significantly increase supply. As one asset
manager concedes, housing undersupply is bad for residents but “supportive for
cashflows”. Blackstone’s president famously admitted that “the big warning
signs in real estate are capital and cranes”. In other words, they need
shortages to keep prices high.
Where
corporate capital does produce new homes, they will of course be maximally
profitable. Cities such as Manchester, Brussels and Warsaw have experienced a
proliferation of high-margins housing products such as micro-apartments,
build-to-rent and co-living. Designed with the explicit intention of optimising
cashflows, these are both unaffordable and unsuitable for most households.
Common Wealth, a thinktank focusing on ownership, found that the private
equity-backed build-to-rent sector, which accounts for 30% of new homes in
London, caters predominantly to high-earning single people. Families represent
just 5% of build-to-rent tenants compared with a quarter of the private rental
sector more broadly. These overpriced corporate appendages are a stark reminder
of the market’s inability to deliver homes that fit the needs and incomes of
most people.
While
housing lies at the heart of political disillusionment today, it is for the
same reason becoming a primary trigger for mobilisation across Europe. In
October 2024, 150,000 protesters marched through the streets of Madrid
demanding action. Some governments, including Denmark and the Netherlands, are
introducing policies to deter speculators. But real estate capital continues to
hold the power, so it continues to get its way – including by exploiting
loopholes, and lobbying against policies that put profits at risk. In 2021,
Berliners voted in favour of expropriating and socialising apartments owned by
stock-listed landlords. But under pressure from the real estate lobby,
politicians have stalled this motion. That same year Blackstone – Spain’s
largest landlord with 40,000 housing units – opposed plans to impose a 30%
target for social housing in institutional portfolios. Struggles against the
immense structural power of real-estate interests will be hard fought.
In recent
decades we have been living through an ever-intensifying social experiment. Can
housing, a fundamental need for all human beings, be successfully delivered
under the machinations of finance capitalism? The evidence now seems
overwhelming: no.
As
investors have come to dominate, so the power of residents has been
systematically undermined. We are left with a crisis of inconceivable
proportions. While we can, and should, point the finger at corporate greed, we
must remember that this is the system working precisely as it is set up to do.
When profit is the prevailing force, housing provision invariably fails to
align with social need – to generate the types of homes within the price ranges
most desperately required. In the coming years, housing will occupy centre
stage in European politics. Now is the time for fundamental structural changes
that reclaim homes from the jaws of finance, re-empower residents and reinstate
housing as a core priority for public provision.
Tim White
is a research fellow at Queen Mary University of London and the London School
of Economics studying housing, cities and inequality

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