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The case Tachyon9 is putting to public investors comes down to one distinction: how much of this is signed, and how much is still proposed.
The company says it has signed a binding 15-year memorandum of understanding with Nidar Infrastructure, the parent of Indian AI-infrastructure operator Yotta Data Services, to anchor the first 100 MW of its planned Nakota AI Data Campus, and it attaches roughly $2.34 billion of revenue to that opening phase over the full term.
It frames the agreement as the cornerstone of a proposed combination with Nasdaq-listed Nixxy. The partner's quality is the real draw; the signed-versus-proposed split is what an investor should weigh.
The case Tachyon9 is making Strip away the language about platforms and value chains and the argument is simple: a credible operator has agreed to take down the first slice of capacity.
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