Diginex is running two parallel tracks this month, each critical to its next stage of growth. The company has installed a new commercial leader to overhaul sales strategy while simultaneously racing to finalise a private investor-backed acquisition of Resulticks Global Companies. The July 31 cut-off date for that deal is now the sole focus for management and shareholders alike.
Jan-Jaap Verhoeve steps into the role of chief commercial officer with a mandate to expand Diginex’s global partner ecosystem. He will oversee direct and indirect sales channels, build out a reseller network, and push deeper into distribution and system-integration routes to market. Verhoeve previously helped scale Plan A, a corporate sustainability platform serving clients such as BMW, Visa and Deutsche Bank, and co-founded the Greentech Alliance, a network of more than 3,500 sustainability-focused businesses.
The appointment comes just one day after Diginex pushed the long-stop date for the Resulticks acquisition from June 30 to July 31 — what both sides describe as a final extension. The company has confirmed that private investors have provided a firm commitment to finance the transaction, with no public capital rounds planned. That structure spares existing shareholders dilution, but the deal still hinges on the completion of final documentation in the coming weeks.
CEO Lubomila Jordanova cited Verhoeve’s blend of commercial experience and partnership-building acumen as the driving factor behind the hire. In addition to his sales responsibilities, the new CCO will contribute an M&A lens to Diginex’s acquisition strategy, advising on transactions that can accelerate market penetration. Jordanova sees Verhoeve as a bridge between the company’s organic growth ambitions and the potential integration of Resulticks.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?
The market has taken notice of the twin developments. Diginex shares closed Friday at $1.19, up 1.71% on the day, for a weekly gain of 3.48% and a 30-day advance of 21.43%. The relative strength index stands at 36.8 — well below overbought territory — suggesting room for further upside if positive news emerges. Yet the stock’s annualised 30-day volatility of 197.16% underscores just how dramatically prices can swing for a company with a market capitalisation of roughly €29.82 million.
Two events now dominate the near-term calendar. The first is the delivery of final documentation from the private investors backing the Resulticks purchase. The second is an extraordinary general meeting that Diginex plans to call shortly after that documentation is in hand, when shareholders will vote on the transaction. The company has cautioned that there is no guarantee the financing or the deal itself will be completed.
Beyond the merger, Diginex’s core business — AI- and blockchain-powered tools for ESG and climate reporting — continues to operate independently of the Resulticks outcome. A successful integration would dramatically expand the addressable market, but the company’s standalone strategy remains intact. For now, all eyes are on July 31, the date that will determine whether Diginex pulls off its biggest acquisition or returns to a purely organic growth path.
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