Diginex Faces a September Showdown as Nasdaq Deadline Looms Over AI-Driven Pivot
01.05.2026 - 14:42:22 | boerse-global.de
The clock is ticking on two fronts for Diginex. While the company races to close an all-stock acquisition that would fundamentally reshape its business, a separate countdown is running at the Nasdaq exchange, where the stock’s prolonged slide below $1.00 has triggered a compliance deadline.
A Platform Reboot in the Making
Diginex is shedding its identity as a pure-play sustainability data provider. The new blueprint calls for an integrated platform that feeds ESG, compliance, and supply-chain data directly into corporate workflows — not just generating reports, but enabling real-time customer interactions powered by artificial intelligence.
The linchpin of this transformation is the planned takeover of Resulticks Global Companies, a Singapore-based firm that brings an AI-driven activation layer to the table. Resulticks is expected to contribute roughly $150 million in annual revenue, with EBITDA landing between $46 million and $50 million — representing a margin north of 30 percent.
The transaction is structured entirely as a stock swap. Diginex has set a 30-day window to close the deal, though management has been careful not to guarantee completion.
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Internal Overhaul Precedes the Deal
Before the Resulticks acquisition could move forward, Diginex had to clean house internally. On April 1, 2026, the company dissolved its structure of four independent subsidiaries, consolidating operations into a single integrated unit. The reorganization followed a strategic review that involved more than 60 employee interviews.
Jacob Friedman has been installed as chief operating officer to unify customer operations, while Sandra Kovacheva, formerly general counsel at Plan A, steps in as chief administrative officer.
The Nasdaq Compliance Squeeze
The stock’s troubles began on March 23, 2026, when the Nasdaq notified Diginex that its share price had closed below $1.00 for 30 consecutive trading days — a violation of Listing Rule 5550(a)(2). The company now has until September 21, 2026, to demonstrate compliance by closing at or above the $1.00 threshold for ten consecutive sessions.
If that target is missed, a second 180-day grace period could be available, potentially paired with a reverse stock split. The shares closed Thursday at $1.82, a welcome bounce from the turbulence seen on April 29, when the stock swung between $2.40 and $4.99 before losing 8.78 percent the following day after the strategic update.
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What Comes Next
Investors will get their next formal check-in on July 9, when the board releases quarterly results. But the market’s immediate focus is squarely on whether the Resulticks deal reaches the finish line within that 30-day window. Management has promised to unveil a detailed roadmap for the combined entity in the second quarter of 2026, including specific synergy targets.
For now, Diginex is running two races simultaneously — one to close a transformative acquisition, the other to keep its Nasdaq listing alive. Both have hard deadlines, and neither leaves much room for error.
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