A Six-Cent Gap Could Cost Diginex Its Nasdaq Listing and a $150 Million Deal
23.06.2026 - 09:21:42 | boerse-global.de
Diginex is chasing a huge opportunity in the market for verified ESG and regulatory data, but its share price is stuck below the $1 threshold that Nasdaq demands. The London-based company now faces two deadlines that could reshape — or unravel — its future within the next three months.
The group is a specialist in RegTech software, using blockchain, artificial intelligence, and machine learning to help corporations and governments track climate targets, supply chains, and sustainability data. Management is currently consolidating several business units into a single platform, betting that regulatory pressure worldwide will drive demand for a verifiable data standard. Digital security underpins the architecture, and the software is being extended to cover global supply chains. The market for such tools is growing fast, but Diginex itself remains a small-cap player with a market capitalisation of roughly €23 million.
At the close on Monday, the stock changed hands at $0.96. That is just four cents below the minimum bid price required by the Nasdaq Capital Market. The shares have been living on the edge for months. In March 2026, Nasdaq notified Diginex that the bid-price rule had been violated — the stock had closed under $1 for 30 consecutive trading days. The company responded in April with an 8-to-1 reverse stock split, keeping authorised capital at 495 million common shares. The fix did not hold. By June 22, the stock was trading between $0.90 and $0.99, with daily volume that day of roughly 400,000 shares against an average of 1.11 million.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?
The ride has been wild. Annualised volatility stands at nearly 127 percent, and the relative strength index of 35.1 suggests the stock is approaching oversold territory. On a weekly basis, however, the price has been relatively calm, slipping just 1.02 percent — a rare stretch of stability for a name that typically swings hard.
What makes the current price so critical is a second deadline that arrives before Nasdaq’s. Diginex must close its acquisition of Resulticks Global Companies by June 30 — or the deal collapses. The merger, structured as a pure share exchange, would bring in roughly $150 million in annual revenue and EBITDA of $46 million to $50 million. Strategically, it would pivot the firm from sustainability reporting into real-time marketing and customer engagement. But because the transaction is all-stock, a depressed share price directly reduces Diginex’s purchasing power and makes the offer less appealing to Resulticks’ shareholders. Both parties have already extended the original closing date once, from June 12 to June 30, and no completion is guaranteed.
If Diginex cannot regain Nasdaq compliance by September 21, it can request a further 180-day extension, provided it meets all other initial listing standards. A second reverse split remains an option. If that fails, the stock could be delisted altogether. The company and Resulticks have pledged to provide an update on the transaction by June 30 — the earliest concrete signal of whether the deal remains on track.
Diginex is trying to execute a business pivot while simultaneously fighting for its place on a major exchange. The next few weeks will show whether the market sees the same value in that shift as management does.
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