Diginex Brings In EU Forced-Labour Advisor as Shares Sink to $1.15 and Nasdaq Deadline Nears
14.05.2026 - 10:32:17 | boerse-global.de
A new 52-week low, an eight-day losing streak and a ticking Nasdaq compliance clock are testing investor patience at Diginex, even as the supply-chain compliance specialist posts a 203% revenue surge and pursues a $1.5 billion acquisition.
Shares of the RegTech company hit $1.15 on Wednesday before closing at $1.20, marking the eighth consecutive session of declines. The slide has pushed the stock more than 30% below Nasdaq’s $1.00 minimum bid-price requirement — a level Diginex has now breached for 30 straight trading days. Under exchange rules, it must reclaim that threshold by September 21, 2026, or face delisting.
An impact hire with a familiar face
Against this bleak market backdrop, Diginex named Archana Kotecha as its new Chief Impact Officer. Kotecha is a UK-qualified barrister and a CEDR-accredited mediator with nearly two decades of experience advising multinational corporations, UN agencies and institutional investors across Asia. She sits on the European Commission’s Informal Expert Group on forced labour and serves on the Steering Committee of the Responsible Labor Initiative.
Kotecha is no stranger to the company. Diginex acquired her organisation, The Remedy Project, in January 2026. Her appointment signals a push to embed advisory expertise directly into the product platform to help clients navigate an increasingly dense regulatory environment for human rights and supply-chain due diligence. That market was worth $3.8 billion globally in 2025 and is projected to reach $9.6 billion by 2034. Starting June 2, Kotecha will lead a three-part masterclass series targeting legal, compliance and procurement executives.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?
Revenue climb, earnings crater
Operationally, Diginex is firing on all cylinders in terms of top-line growth. Revenue over the past twelve months jumped 203%, driven by demand for software that helps companies comply with ESG mandates and supply-chain transparency rules. The company has consolidated four operating units — including the subsidiary Plan A — onto a single platform covering carbon accounting, sustainability reporting, sustainable finance, human rights due diligence and supply-chain traceability.
Profitability, however, remains elusive. The company reported a loss of $0.48 per share, burning cash at a pace that has shrunk its market capitalisation to roughly $35 million. That has raised questions about whether Diginex can finance its growth ambitions without further dilution.
A $1.5 billion bet in the works
In the background, the company is pushing to close its planned acquisition of Resulticks, a deal valued at $1.5 billion. For a firm with a market cap of just $35 million, the transaction represents an enormous strategic — and financial — leap. Options contracts expiring Thursday are adding near-term volatility to an already jittery stock.
Diginex at a turning point? This analysis reveals what investors need to know now.
Adding to the pressure, the Rosen Law Firm is investigating potential securities claims against Diginex, alleging the company may have issued materially misleading business information to the public.
The message from the Nasdaq is unambiguous: Diginex has until September to prove its turnaround story can lift the stock above $1.00. The appointment of a high-profile impact officer may boost its ESG credentials, but converting regulatory expertise into sustainable profit — and a compliant share price — is a race against a four-month clock.
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