Canix Acquires Trym, Fits into Larger Consolidation Pattern in Cannabis

1.6 min readPublished On: January 28th, 2026By

LOS ANGELES – San Francisco-based Canix, a provider of enterprise resource planning (ERP) software for Cannabis businesses, has acquired Trym, a specialized cultivation management platform.

The deal combines Canix’s comprehensive ERP system [which handles cultivation through distribution, inventory, manufacturing, and pricing, including granular profit calculations] with Trym’s focused tools for grow operations. Trym’s features include yield forecasting, environmental monitoring, team task management, and mobile workflows that feed more precise data into profit optimization processes.

“Canix and Trym have been building in parallel for years, solving complementary problems for the same operators,” Benjamin Wong, co-founder and CEO of Trym, said in a statement. “We share a deep understanding of how cultivation actually works and what operators need to scale profitably. Joining forces allows us to deliver faster workflows, better data, and more powerful insights as part of a truly end-to-end ERP.”

Stacey Hronowski, co-founder of Canix, emphasized the strategic fit: “Deep operational intelligence will define the next generation of market leaders. Our long-term goal is clear: We’re building the most advanced technology platform for Cannabis operators, one that supports them from seed to sale, from compliance to optimization, and from local markets to global expansion. Trym’s cultivation expertise is essential to that vision.”

The acquisition arrives as consolidation picks up in the Cannabis software space. Operators increasingly seek unified platforms to reduce fragmentation in tools for compliance, tracking, and decision-making, particularly with state-by-state regulations and Metrc integration demands. Canix, which serves cultivators, manufacturers, and distributors across multiple states and countries, positions the combined entity to offer stronger end-to-end support amid ongoing market pressures on margins and efficiency.

On a broader scale, this move reflects a widening trend where software providers in the heavily regulated Cannabis industry prioritize to consolidate their expertise rather than compete on narrow specialties. For operators, this acquisition means fewer systems to manage and more reliable data to utilize for running profitable, compliant businesses.

About the Author: HCN News Team

The News Team at Highly Capitalized are some of the most experienced writers in cannabis and psychedelics business & finance. We cover capital markets, finance, branding, marketing and everything important in between. Most of all, we follow the money.

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!