HomeAI & Quantum ComputingSupply Chain Compliance Boom Drives Diginex’s $100M Acquisition Spree and New Human...

Supply Chain Compliance Boom Drives Diginex’s $100M Acquisition Spree and New Human Rights Hire

The market for supply chain due diligence is accelerating at pace, and Diginex is positioning itself squarely in its path. Dataintelo pegged the sector at $3.8 billion in 2025, with projections hitting $9.6 billion by 2034. To capture that growth, the Nasdaq-listed company is weaving together AI, data analytics, sustainability reporting, and regulatory compliance into a single platform — a strategy that has already consumed more than $100 million in acquisitions over the past 16 months.

Diginex has tapped Archana Kotecha as its new Chief Impact Officer, a move that brings not only her 20 years of experience advising multinationals and UN agencies on human rights and supply chain compliance, but also the company she founded. Diginex bought The Remedy Project in January 2026 for $7.6 million, folding Kotecha’s expertise into the group. She is a UK-qualified barrister, a CEDR-accredited mediator, and sits on the European Commission’s informal expert group on forced labour — connections that could prove valuable as regulatory scrutiny intensifies.

Kotecha is tasked with driving measurable client outcomes and revenue growth, and will launch a three-part masterclass series for legal, compliance and procurement professionals starting on June 2, 2026. Her appointment is the latest in a string of executive hires that also includes Jacob Friedman as Chief Operating Officer and Sandra Kovacheva as Chief Administrative Officer, all working to consolidate four operating units into one integrated ESG platform.

Diginex’s transformation began well before Kotecha joined. In October 2025 it bought Matter DK ApS for $13 million, strengthening its ESG analytics and sustainable finance data for institutional investors. The Remedy Project added human rights and supply chain expertise. Then in February 2026, Diginex announced the $80 million acquisition of Plan A, a European decarbonization platform that extended its climate intelligence capabilities and continental footprint.

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To fund and signal commitment, founder and Chairman Miles Pelham has invested $25.4 million since January 2025, purchasing shares at an average price of $5.65 each. A separate strategic reseller agreement worth $40 million is intended to accelerate the rollout of AI-driven customer intelligence and enterprise solutions.

The biggest bet, however, remains the proposed all-share acquisition of Resulticks Global Companies, valued at $1.5 billion — a transaction that would dwarf everything Diginex has done so far. Both parties extended the closing deadline to May 31, 2026, while final financing arrangements and closing conditions are sorted out. Diginex has been careful to note there is no guarantee the deal will close, a caution reinforced by the stock’s extreme volatility: over the past 52 weeks, shares have swung between $1.15 and $318.84.

Should the Resulticks transaction succeed, Diginex’s size and scope will change overnight. If it falls through, management will need to prove that the three acquisitions already completed can be knitted together into a commercially viable platform — a test where the technology and the talent must converge before the market opportunity slips away.

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