
Latin America. Land, water, power and the long view.
Latin America rewards investors who stay through the cycle and punishes those who do not. We hold real assets here with capital that does not flinch at an election or a currency swing.
Real estate
Residential, mixed-use and income-producing assets in growing secondary cities, held for decades and improved continuously.
Conservation
Standing forests, watersheds and working landscapes as productive long-term assets: conservation finance, restoration and the revenue models that make protection durable.
Community development
Projects that raise the floor of a neighbourhood, infrastructure, services and public space, because the value of everything else we hold depends on it.
Utilities
Water, power and the quiet networks beneath both.
We buy what forced sellers leave behind and hold what quarterly investors cannot. The cycle is the opportunity.
Why does Oxbridge invest in conservation in Latin America?
Because ecosystems underwrite every other asset class in the region. We treat standing forests and watersheds as productive long-term holdings, financed to stay standing.
What kind of real estate does Oxbridge hold in Latin America?
Residential, mixed-use and income-producing assets in growing secondary cities, acquired for multi-decade holds rather than development flips.
How does patient capital handle Latin American political and currency cycles?
By never being a forced seller. Permanent capital and conservative structures let us hold through volatility that shorter-term investors must trade around.