Diginex’s, Data-Platform

Diginex’s Data-Platform Progress Meets Wall of Skepticism as Resulticks Deadline Looms

12.06.2026 - 19:13:12 | boerse-global.de

Diginex faces Nasdaq delisting risk as $1.5B all-share Resulticks takeover remains unclosed; stock trades at $0.97, technicals oversold, but operational progress continues.

Diginex $1.5B Resulticks Takeover Stalls, Stock Below $1 Amid Nasdaq Risk
Diginex’s - Diginex’s Data-Platform Progress Meets Wall of Skepticism as Resulticks Deadline Looms 12.06.2026 - Bild: über boerse-global.de

The clock has struck 12 June 2026, and Diginex still hasn’t confirmed whether its transformative $1.5 billion all-share takeover of Resulticks has closed. The London-based regtech company has already pushed the deadline once, and management itself warns that success is not guaranteed. Investors, meanwhile, have been voting with their feet: the stock trades at around $0.97, leaving it stranded below the critical $1 mark with a market capitalisation of barely €26 million.

That price action masks a quieter story of operational progress. Diginex is stitching together a global sustainability-data platform that unifies carbon accounting, ESG reporting and supply-chain transparency under one roof. The software can now extract carbon data automatically 80% of the time, up from just 25% previously, a leap that speeds up delivery to large institutional clients. The company has also appointed Carole Zibi, a former LinkedIn executive, as chief marketing officer to consolidate four operating units into a single brand.

Yet the market’s focus remains fixed on Resulticks. The takeover target is expected to bring in roughly $150 million in annual revenue and an operating profit in the mid-double-digit millions — a huge jump for Diginex, which reported only about $3.6 million in sales last year. The deal is structured as a pure share swap, meaning there is no cash cushion to soften the blow if it collapses. A positive close could trigger a sharp relief rally; a failure would thrust the Nasdaq delisting risk into the spotlight.

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

The stock’s technical picture underscores the tension. Over the past month, Diginex has fallen 19.22% by one measure and 20.33% by another, with a 30-day annualised volatility of nearly 124%. The relative strength index has slipped into oversold territory — hovering between 29.6 and 30.1 — but a low RSI alone does not guarantee a turnaround. Intraday moves are erratic: Tuesday saw a 0.42% gain in one article and a 0.95% loss in another, reflecting the jittery, news-sensitive trading.

Diginex must reclaim the $1 threshold by 21 September 2026 to comply with Nasdaq’s minimum bid-price rule. That deadline adds a second layer of urgency on top of the Resulticks decision. The company’s new compliance-tool for supply-chain laws may strengthen the core business, but the market is waiting for proof that the mega-deal has actually closed. Until the ink is dry on that agreement, the wide gap between management’s ambition and the stock’s reality is likely to persist.

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