The ESG software provider is undergoing a sweeping corporate overhaul that touches nearly every aspect of its business — from its share structure to its internal operating model — all while pursuing a billion-dollar acquisition that would fundamentally reshape its technology stack.
A Nasdaq Clock Ticks Down
Diginex’s stock consolidation took effect after shareholders approved the 8-for-1 reverse split at an extraordinary general meeting on April 13. The move was triggered by a formal Nasdaq deficiency notice on March 23, after the company’s shares had traded below the $1.00 minimum bid price for 30 consecutive sessions.
For compliance to be restored, the stock must now close above $1.00 for ten straight trading days. The company has until September 21, 2026 to meet that requirement. The ticker symbol DGNX remains unchanged, and proportional ownership stakes are preserved.
Four Become One
Since April 1, what was once a holding company with separate ESG subsidiaries has been transformed into a single integrated technology entity. Diginex, Plan A, Matter and The Remedy Project are now operating under one roof — a structural shift approved unanimously by the board after more than 60 internal interviews and a comprehensive portfolio analysis.
The logic is straightforward: carbon accounting, sustainability reporting, supply chain transparency and human rights due diligence will no longer be sold as standalone products. Instead, they are being packaged as a coherent system for institutional clients. The company says it processes hundreds of millions of sustainability-related data points monthly, a foundation that should enable bundled offerings and deeper corporate relationships.
The management team has been reshuffled accordingly. Jacob Friedman took on the newly created role of chief operating officer in early April, tasked with coordinating the operational merger. Sandra Kovacheva was appointed chief administrative officer, while former COO Christian Thierfelder moved into the chief information officer position.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?
A $1.5 Billion All-Stock Bet on AI
Parallel to the internal consolidation, Diginex is pushing toward the closing of its acquisition of Resulticks Global Companies, a Singapore-based developer of AI-powered customer data platforms. The purchase price stands at $1.5 billion, payable entirely in Diginex shares at $1.32 each. Closing is expected within 30 to 45 days of the mid-April signing, subject to customary conditions.
The deal builds on a memorandum of understanding from June 2025 and a reseller agreement signed in February 2026 that targets cumulative revenue of $40 million over four years. Resulticks generated roughly $150 million in revenue in 2025 with an EBITDA margin of 32 percent, and has averaged 70 percent annual revenue growth over the past five years. Management projects 2026 revenue of $190 million to $210 million.
The strategic rationale: structured, verified ESG data will be combined with Resulticks’ real-time capabilities, shifting companies from retrospective reporting toward ongoing operational use of compliance data.
Growth Without Profit — For Now
Diginex’s own revenue has climbed 203 percent over the past twelve months, driven largely by regulatory frameworks such as the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive. But profitability remains elusive. EBITDA stood at negative $9.58 million, with an operating loss of $6.0 million. The company holds $13.8 million in cash.
The technical integration of five distinct business lines carries substantial operational risk — and management must navigate that while maintaining Nasdaq compliance. The detailed integrated strategy for the combined entity is expected to be unveiled in the second quarter of 2026.
The July quarterly report will offer the first concrete evidence of whether the reverse split, the internal consolidation and the Resulticks acquisition are working in concert.
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