A $25.4 Million Personal Vote: Inside Diginex’s High-Stakes Countdown to June 12
04.06.2026 - 06:41:21 | boerse-global.de
The arithmetic of Diginex’s planned takeover of Resulticks Global Companies is as stark as it gets: an acquisition target with roughly $150 million in annualized revenue and EBITDA between $46 million and $50 million is being swallowed by a company that reported just $3.6 million in sales and an EBITDA loss of $9.6 million over its most recent period. That gap alone would make the deal a transformative leap. What makes it even more extraordinary is the personal money chairman Miles Pelham has already sunk into the effort.
Since the Nasdaq listing, Pelham has poured $25.4 million of his own wealth into Diginex at an average purchase price of $5.69 per share. With the stock now trading around $1.09, that stake is deep underwater — yet he has not wavered. Market observers read the chairman’s continued commitment as a signal he believes the Resulticks integration can be completed, even as the clock ticks down to a revised long-stop date of June 12, 2026.
The Price Disconnect
The deal was announced on April 16 as a pure stock swap valued at $1.5 billion. After an 8-for-1 reverse stock split, the adjusted reference price per share stands at $10.56, with roughly 141.7 million shares to be issued as consideration. The current market price of $1.09 — down nearly 7% on the day and more than 41% over the past month — therefore trades at a colossal discount to that theoretical value. That chasm reflects the market pricing in execution risk, dilution, and integration complexity rather than outright deal failure.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?
Diginex itself acknowledges the uncertainty. In a filing with the SEC on June 3, the company confirmed the long-stop date had been pushed from May 29 to June 12, noting that closing conditions remain pending and there is no guarantee of completion. The same filing describes the transaction as Diginex’s strategic pivot from a pure-play sustainability data provider to an integrated platform combining ESG compliance with real-time decision support and customer intelligence.
Volatility That Tests Nerves
If the stock’s trajectory is any guide, investors are not waiting for clarity. Over the past 30 trading days, Diginex shares have shed roughly 40% of their value — a weekly drop of more than 23%. The annualized volatility stretches beyond 1,400%, making the equity one of the most extreme plays on the Nasdaq. For context, that kind of price action is normally associated with heavily shorted micro-caps or pre-revenue biotechs; here it is driven entirely by a single binary event.
That event is the June 12 deadline. If Diginex can satisfy all remaining closing conditions by then, the combined entity would instantly leap from a loss-making micro-cap to a company generating nine-figure revenue and positive cash flow. If the deal falls through, the growth narrative collapses entirely — and the stock, already priced for failure at $1.09, could fall further.
Pelham’s $25.4 million personal stake ensures he has every incentive to push the transaction over the line. But with the reference price of $10.56 now a distant memory for shareholders who bought near the April highs, the market is betting that the chairman’s conviction may not be enough to bridge the gap before the clock runs out.
Ad
Diginex Stock: New Analysis - 4 June
Fresh Diginex information released. What's the impact for investors? Our latest independent report examines recent figures and market trends.
