Diginex’s technology arm Matter has crossed a key milestone: its artificial intelligence models now automatically extract 80% of carbon data from corporate reports, up from just 25% previously. The upgrade serves institutions managing $20 trillion in assets and is expected to speed the flow of sustainability data from more than 1,000 companies. It is a concrete sign that the ESG regtech group’s operational engine is accelerating — even as its stock price struggles to stay above $1.
The shares closed Thursday at $0.91, leaving Diginex well below Nasdaq’s minimum bid requirement. That triggered a warning from the exchange in March, giving the company until September 21, 2026 to regain compliance. A reverse stock split in April, which consolidated eight old shares into one, failed to lift the price to the needed level. The relative strength index now sits at 31.8, a deeply oversold reading, while annualized volatility stands at a punishing 126%.
Management has responded by restructuring the company into a single integrated platform. Four previously separate units — the parent company, Plan A.Earth, Matter, and The Remedy Project — are being merged into one technology stack. The goal is to offer banks and asset managers a one-stop shop for sustainability compliance. To drive the rebranding, Carole Zibi was appointed chief marketing officer in mid-June after previously leading communications at subsidiary Plan A. Archana Kotecha has taken the role of chief impact officer, tasked with converting ESG solutions into measurable revenue growth.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?
The regulatory environment strengthens the business case. The EU’s Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive has been formally adopted, with member states required to transpose it into national law by July 2026. A new legislative package does delay the obligations for some companies until 2029, but the prevailing uncertainty continues to fuel demand for flexible compliance tools. Analysts estimate the market for such software at $3.8 billion this year, with projections of $9.6 billion by 2034.
Yet all of that strategic progress is overshadowed by the drawn-out merger with Resulticks Global Companies. The parties have pushed back the closing deadline for a third time, to June 30, 2026. Material conditions remain unfulfilled, and there is no guarantee the deal will close. If it falls through, Diginex loses a central pillar of its growth narrative. The company has invested heavily — more than $100 million in acquisitions — and has a strategic resale agreement that could unlock another $40 million if necessary. But without the Resulticks transaction, management would have to rely solely on its operational foundation to carry the stock back above the Nasdaq threshold.
The next few days are critical. By June 30 the Resulticks deal must either close or collapse. Failure would almost certainly increase pressure on the already weak share price, bringing the September 21 delisting deadline into sharper focus. For now, Diginex is walking a tightrope between a promising technology platform and the unforgiving math of the market.
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