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Diginex Pins Its Nasdaq Lifeline on a $1.5 Billion All-Stock Transaction

12.06.2026 - 22:23:01 | boerse-global.de

Diginex stock trades at $0.96 with a Nasdaq compliance warning; its fate hinges on the $1.5 billion Resulticks acquisition. A failed deal could trigger delisting, while success may fuel a rally.

Diginex Faces Nasdaq Delisting Risk as $1.5B Resulticks Deal Deadline Expires
Diginex - Diginex Pins Its Nasdaq Lifeline on a $1.5 Billion All-Stock Transaction 12.06.2026 - Bild: ĂĽber boerse-global.de

The clock has run out on a deal that could redefine Diginex – or expose it to the full force of a Nasdaq delisting. June 12 marks the deadline for the company to complete its planned acquisition of Resulticks, a pure share swap valued at $1.5 billion. No official confirmation has been issued, and the market is bracing for impact.

Diginex currently trades at $0.96, a level that has held since it triggered a Nasdaq compliance warning in March. The stock has lost more than 20% over the past 30 days, and the 14-day relative strength index sits at 29.6, a deeply oversold reading that typically signals a rebound – but only if the catalyst arrives. The exchange gave the company until September 21, 2026, to reclaim the $1 threshold on its own.

The Resulticks acquisition, if completed, would transform the company overnight. Diginex reported annual revenue of roughly $3.6 million; Resulticks brings in around $150 million, along with an operating profit of up to $50 million. The deal is structured entirely in stock, meaning Diginex shares would dilute dramatically. Even so, the arithmetic makes for a compelling story – provided the transaction actually closes.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?

Diginex’s core business has been quietly building momentum. The company offers a platform that combines carbon accounting, ESG reporting, and supply-chain transparency. A recent software tool helps clients comply with tightening supply-chain due diligence laws. Management also accelerated the integration of four operating units – Diginex, Plan A, Matter DK, and The Remedy Project – into a single technology stack. Matter, which serves institutional investors, has boosted its automation rate for carbon-data extraction from 25% to 80%.

To sharpen the brand narrative, Diginex appointed Carole Zibi as chief marketing officer on June 10. The former LinkedIn and Disney executive is tasked with unifying the company’s global marketing strategy and making a complex value proposition more accessible.

But none of that progress matters if the Resulticks deal falls through. The stock’s extraordinary 30-day volatility of 123.6% reflects the binary nature of the event. A failed acquisition would leave Diginex with a penny stock and a ticking clock. A successful close, by contrast, could spark an immediate rally – and supply the revenue and earnings need to lift the share price above $1 for good.

The market’s skepticism is understandable. Diginex already conducted a 1-for-8 reverse split in late April to address the Nasdaq rule, reducing outstanding shares to roughly 29 million. That measure failed to sustain the stock above $1. Now, with the extended Resulticks deadline expiring today, the company’s fate rests on a single signature.

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