Acacia trees on open African savanna at first light

Africa. Capital for the systems daily life runs on.

Africa will hold a quarter of the world's people by 2050. The systems that future depends on are being built now. We invest where that building is happening, with the patience it actually takes.

Community development

Integrated projects that pair housing, energy, health and education infrastructure at community scale, planned with the people who will use them. Our company Capulet delivers this work across frontier markets.

Utilities

Distributed generation, grid reliability, water treatment and distribution. Demand is structural; the constraint is patient finance and disciplined operation. We supply both.

Agriculture

Agricultural finance for smallholders and the post-harvest infrastructure, storage, logistics and market access, that turns yield into income. AgriFi, which we built, finances the farmers who feed nations.

Alongside local partners, development finance institutions and governments. Capital grounded in each market's context, never parachuted in.

What does Oxbridge invest in across Africa?

Community development projects, utilities including power and water, and agriculture, from smallholder finance to post-harvest infrastructure, held with permanent family capital.

Does Oxbridge work with development finance institutions?

Yes. We co-invest and partner with DFIs, governments and local operators so that capital is grounded in each market's context.

What does patient capital mean for African infrastructure?

Capital without a forced exit date. African infrastructure rewards investors who can hold through construction, currency cycles and political transitions; ours is structured to do exactly that.