This article investigates housing financialization processes in low-income countries (LICs). Considering housing as both capital and commodity, the article excavates the roots of housing financialization in LICs since the 1960s, and shows how financialization has been used, since the 1990s, to circumvent long-standing obstacles to the marketization and commodification of LICs’ housing markets. Focusing on the recent development of the condominium market in Phnom Penh, the article then investigates the role of various stakeholders in the contemporary financialization of local housing markets.