Tryfecta Group is engineering the vertically integrated industrial architecture for the distributed AI era. We own and operate the complete physical stack: our capital secures foundational assets, traditional AI optimizes the management layer, and distributed Physical AI executes autonomous operations at the edge.
Explore The EcosystemTo act as the catalyst for the Physical AI wave.
Intelligence needs a body. It needs abundant energy to compute and raw materials to act. We bridge the gap between digital potential and physical reality, creating the industrial base for the 21st century.
Turn distressed assets into high-performance engines.
We use Tryfecta Capital to acquire undervalued mines and power plants. We then deploy Tryfecta Management and TX Robotics to optimize, save, and scale these assets, creating exponential value from inefficiency.
Industrial value destruction is a failure of allocation and execution, not technology. Traditional stabilization through cost-cutting has failed.
Global skilled labor availability is in sharp decline. Labor availability, not demand, is the primary constraint on output across the legacy industrial sector.
Legacy industrial assets operate in the dark. You cannot optimize what you cannot see. Without real-time telemetry, assets remain operationally broken.
Establish authority and audit existing data streams with zero operational disruption.
Deploy sensor networks. Make manual industrial operations strictly observable and data-driven.
Inject Deep Tech infrastructure. Remove humans from hazardous zones to increase efficiency.
Recycle cashflows. Institutionalize improvements into the overarching operating system.
The Foundation. We acquire distressed physical assets to build our vertically integrated base. We do not fund growth; we fund the architecture of control, backed by strict asset coverage.
Visit CapitalThe Digital Brain. Traditional AI and advanced analytics manage complex workflows and decision logs, implementing rigid human-in-the-loop oversight to optimize overall asset yield.
The Physical Muscle. Distributed autonomous systems and Physical AI execute operations at the edge, removing humans from hazardous zones and autonomously reconfiguring throughput.
Power generation
& storage
Strategic minerals
& raw materials
Physics Agentic Models
& Automation
A leadership focus on bridging the historical divide between deep-tech software architecture and heavy industrial field execution.
Titto Thomas believes that for heavy industry to survive the next century, it must move at the speed of software. With over two decades of experience spanning large energy infrastructure portfolios to co-founding CYBERLOOP, he has seen firsthand where the friction lies between legacy assets and modern AI.
At Tryfecta Group, Titto focuses on bridging that gap. He spearheads the structuring of specialized investment vehicles dedicated to accelerating cyber-physical technologies that solve real-world industrial problems.
His background includes managing digital product portfolios for major joint ventures like Shell + CNPC, backed by a Master’s in Engineering with Business Management from King's College London, specializing in Robotics and Artificial Intelligence. His passion lies in building the architecture where code meets steel.
Nathan Maroney is the Co-Founder and Director of Tryfecta. With multifaceted experience spanning operations, resource planning, mining, and technology, he specializes in Engineering Procurement Construction Management (EPCM) and Business Development Management (BDM) within the resources sector.
Nathan has successfully led major projects, contracts, and tenders across mineral processing, hard rock exploration, and upstream oil & gas operations. He leverages his deep knowledge in industrial automation, system integration, and digital transformation to optimize mechanical plant operations from greenfield to nameplate capacity.
His mission at Tryfecta is to deploy solutions that aggressively enhance efficiency, sustainability, and profitability across heavy industrial assets.
Why 10 years of sensors didn't change the world.