
Kwang Pithayachariyakul will join Oxford’s Sydney office in June (Image: Oxford Properties)
Oxford Properties has appointed Kwang Pithayachariyakul as a director in its Sydney office, with the Toronto-based executive set to oversee asset management activities across Australia as the Canadian property investor continues to expand its presence Down Under.
Pithayachariyakul will relocate to Sydney in June from Oxford’s global headquarters and report to Oxford Asia Pacific head Alessandro Fiascaris, according to an announcement by the real estate arm of Ontario pension giant OMERS.
Pithayachariyakul joined Oxford four years ago from TD Bank Group and has since held progressively senior roles within Oxford’s Toronto investment team ahead of her permanent transfer to the Harbour City.
“This announcement underscores the importance of Australia to our APAC strategy, and our commitment to deploy capital in new investments,” Fiascaris said. “Together with our platform companies, Oxford manages A$15 billion ($10.9 billion) in assets across Australia, where we continue to look for opportunities to drive value.”
Rapid Rise
Pithayachariyakul joined Oxford in 2022 as an associate focused on investments before being promoted to associate director of investments in 2023 and director of investments in January last year.

Alessandro Fiascaris, senior vice president and head of investments for Asia Pacific at Oxford Properties
Before moving into institutional real estate, she worked in investment banking in the real estate group at TD Securities. Her experience also includes an earlier stint in project management at PCRE Group in Western Canada.
Pithayachariyakul earned a mechanical engineering degree from the University of British Columbia and an MBA from Ivey Business School at Western University in Ontario.
Her relocation comes as Oxford continues deploying capital into Australian real estate through partnerships and operating platforms spanning logistics, rental housing and alternatives.
Backing Hale Logistics
Mingtiandi reported in March that Oxford had backed a A$750 million Australian logistics investment vehicle raised by Hale Capital Partners, with the Canadian investor joining Warburg Pincus in supporting the strategy targeting supply-constrained infill markets.
The vehicle marked Hale’s largest capital raise to date as investor appetite for logistics properties remains firm despite softer leasing conditions in some precincts.
Oxford has also been growing its exposure to Australia’s build-to-rent sector through Indi, its rental housing venture with Sydney-based Investa. The partners this year celebrated the launch of Indi Sydney, a 234-unit BTR project in the city’s inner south, while continuing work on a broader pipeline of rental housing developments across the country.
Media reports have linked Oxford and Investa’s Indi platform to potential strategic interest from investors seeking exposure to Australia’s growing institutional rental housing sector, amid expectations that large-scale BTR operators could attract fresh capital as the market matures.
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