Diginex's Make-or-Break Moment: Regulatory Tailwinds, a $150 Million Takeover, and a Nasdaq Clock
11.06.2026 - 14:24:41 | boerse-global.de
The global market for supply chain due diligence is projected to swell from $3.8 billion in 2025 to $9.6 billion by 2034, driven by a wave of new laws across Europe, the UK, Australia and Canada. Yet Diginex, a company squarely positioned to ride that wave, has seen its shares lose nearly 19% over the past month. At $0.98, the stock is technically oversold, with a relative strength index of 30.2.
That disconnect comes down to a single, overwhelming unknown: whether the company can close its blockbuster acquisition of Resulticks by the end of this week.
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The Resulticks Ultimatum
Friday, 12 June 2026 marks the expiry of the final contractual deadline for the all-stock takeover. Diginex has already extended the timeline once while waiting for last regulatory clearances. The deal is transformative: Resulticks is expected to contribute roughly $150 million in annual revenue and as much as $50 million in EBITDA. For a company with a market capitalisation of barely €25 million, the scale is almost surreal. The entire purchase price will be settled with Diginex shares, which raises the spectre of heavy dilution for existing holders.
The company has been explicit that completion is not guaranteed. That uncertainty has swung the stock violently in both directions on each piece of news.
A Platform Born from Four Parts
Beyond the pending acquisition, Diginex is in the midst of a sweeping internal overhaul. Four previously separate business lines are being consolidated into a single integrated technology platform:
- Diginex – core compliance solutions
- Plan A – carbon accounting specialist
- Matter DK – ESG data analytics
- The Remedy Project – supply chain compliance expertise
To give this new structure a coherent market identity, Carole Zibi has been appointed chief marketing officer, effective immediately. She previously led marketing at Plan A, one of the recently acquired subsidiaries. The mandate is clear: dramatically boost the visibility of the merged group.
This consolidation follows three earlier acquisitions since the Nasdaq listing in January 2025 – Matter DK for $13 million, The Remedy Project for $7.6 million and Plan A for $80 million. The ambition is to offer carbon accounting, sustainability reporting, sustainable finance and supply chain transparency under one roof.
From Declarations to Proof
In early June, Diginex launched a new product dubbed "Risk-to-Remedy". It combines three tools: LUMEN for supply chain risk assessment, APPRISE for direct worker engagement, and the grievance expertise of The Remedy Project. The idea is to move beyond supplier declarations and annual audits – which capture little about the actual experience of workers – toward verifiable compliance.
The regulatory environment makes the pitch timely. The EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive must be transposed into national law by mid-2026. Germany’s supply chain due diligence act is already in force. The EU Forced Labour Regulation will ban products linked to forced labour from the internal market. Additional laws in the UK, Australia and Canada add further layers of obligation. An estimated 50 million people are trapped in forced labour globally, and 86% of that exploitation occurs in the private sector.
Companies that cannot demonstrate adequate due diligence face product bans, fines and reputational damage – losses that typically far outstrip the cost of prevention.
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The Nasdaq Clock Keeps Ticking
The Resulticks deadline is not the only countdown on management’s calendar. Diginex must also meet the Nasdaq’s continued listing requirements. The board has until 21 September 2026 to push the share price above the $1 threshold. A successful Resulticks close on Friday would provide powerful fuel for the stock, though the dilution from the share exchange could work in the opposite direction.
For now, the market is waiting for proof. The company reports increased interest from corporate clients in its bundled offerings, but hard revenue figures from the new structure have yet to materialise. The second-quarter results, due in the coming weeks, will serve as the first real test of whether the platform can deliver commercially.
A growing market alone does not create enterprise value. Friday’s outcome will determine which direction the next move takes.
