Joseph Pamic, who spearheaded a series of M&A deals that helped Stittsville-based Power-Tek Group more than triple its revenues since 2020, announced this week he has launched a venture with Toronto-based business partner Robert Curran aimed at acquiring companies in the precision manufacturing, industrial and consumer packaging industries.
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An Ottawa entrepreneur whose knack for timely acquisitions fuelled a major growth spurt at a well-known local construction firm is branching out into the industrial sector.
Joseph Pamic, who spearheaded a series of M&A deals that helped Stittsville-based Power-Tek Group more than triple its revenues since 2020, announced this week he has launched a venture with Toronto-based business partner Robert Curran aimed at acquiring companies in the precision manufacturing, industrial and consumer packaging industries.
Now doing business as Lioncrest Industries, the organization was incorporated last summer as King West Partners Holding Ltd., a nod to the Toronto neighbourhood where its co-founders first met more than a decade ago.
Over the past 18 months, Pamic and Curran have quietly completed a series of acquisitions that brought five companies with a total of more than 100 employees in eastern Ontario and the Greater Toronto Area under the King West umbrella. Freshly rebranded as Lioncrest, the company had its coming-out party this week in posts on the founders’ LinkedIn pages.
In an interview with OBJ on Tuesday, Pamic said he and Curran – a former investment banker who recently left his role as managing partner at Toronto-based Socium Capital to devote himself full-time to Lioncrest – have “always talked about doing something together.”
An opportunity presented itself as Pamic started coming across attractive M&A targets that “were not a fit for Power-Tek.” Last year, he and Curran zeroed in on a plan to start “buying and running” companies that serve customers in burgeoning industries such as defence and robotics.
“Eventually, the timing was right,” Pamic says. “We’re just aligned on everything. Two heads are better than one. We can bounce ideas off each other, deal with difficult situations together, kind of strategize together. There are two of us, so we’re twice as dangerous. We can do twice as much work.”

