Fox Meadows Holdings exists to steward one family's capital across the things worth owning, patiently, seriously, and without anyone else's timetable.
Fox Meadows Holdings is a private holding company, a home for permanent capital rather than a fund raised from strangers. We buy and build a small collection of real assets and operating businesses, and we hold them for as long as they keep earning their place.
Because the money is our own, our incentives are refreshingly boring. We don't need to sell a good building to hit a fundraising cycle. We don't chase a headline multiple to impress a committee. We can wait out a bad year, back a management team through a hard quarter, and let genuinely good decisions compound.
The result is a portfolio that grows the way an estate does: slowly, deliberately, and mostly out of view.
A name should tell you how a firm behaves. Ours holds two ideas we try to keep in tension.
Patient, opportunistic, and clever about where it hunts. The fox doesn't chase everything that moves, it waits, watches, and moves once, decisively.
Land you tend across seasons, not a field you strip and leave. Value that's cultivated, protected, and handed forward in better shape than you found it.
We take real positions, control, majority, meaningful stakes, because you can only steward what you actually hold.
We fall in love with the margin of safety, not the pitch. If the base case has to be perfect, it isn't a deal.
Spreadsheets lie; site visits don't. We stay near the buildings, the books, and the people running both.
Reputation is the only asset we can't repurchase. We price it accordingly and spend it carefully.
Heath Wruble is the managing partner of Fox Meadows Holdings, where he sets investment direction and stays close to every asset the firm owns.
His career has run along two rails at once: the discipline and risk instincts of Wall Street, and the operator's view from inside real estate and early-stage companies. That combination shapes how Fox Meadows works, willing to underwrite unconventional structures, but happiest when the numbers are conservative and the work is real.
Across value add commercial real estate and frontier technology, Heath's throughline is the same: buy carefully, operate seriously, and hold the good ones long enough for time to do its work. He is direct on terms, allergic to jargon, and a believer that the best partnerships are the ones where a handshake still settles the matter.
He built Fox Meadows to be the place that outlasts any single deal, a family firm designed to own things well, for a very long time.