Diginex, Faces

Diginex Faces a June 30 Judgment Day on Resulticks as Share Price Slides Below Nasdaq Threshold

20.06.2026 - 05:53:18 | boerse-global.de

Diginex stock slides to $0.90 after reverse split fails, with Nasdaq cure deadline on Sept 21 and a $1.5B Resulticks deal repeatedly delayed, testing investor patience.

Diginex Faces Dual Deadlines: Nasdaq Delisting Risk and $1.5B Acquisition Crunch
Diginex - Diginex Faces a June 30 Judgment Day on Resulticks as Share Price Slides Below Nasdaq Threshold 20.06.2026 - Bild: ĂĽber boerse-global.de

The clock is running on two fronts for Diginex. One deadline concerns a $1.5 billion acquisition that would transform the company’s business model. The other is a simpler but equally existential test: keeping the stock above $1.00 to avoid being booted from the Nasdaq Capital Market. With shares trading at $0.90, both timers are now dangerously close to zero.

The delisting threat came into focus on March 23, 2026, when Nasdaq formally notified Diginex that its closing price had stayed below $1.00 for 30 consecutive trading days, violating Listing Rule 5550(a)(2). The company received a standard 180-day cure period, which runs out on September 21. To restore compliance, Diginex pulled the usual lever: an 8-for-1 reverse stock split, approved by shareholders with 99.7% of votes cast at an extraordinary general meeting in April. The share count dropped from roughly 232.8 million to about 29.1 million.

The boost was short-lived. The stock has since eroded, shedding 19.64% over the past 30 days. With an RSI of 31.5, the shares are technically oversold, but technical indicators alone won’t stop the slide. If Diginex cannot close above $1.00 for at least ten consecutive sessions before September 21, it could request a second 180-day extension — provided it meets all other initial listing standards and commits in writing to fixing the shortfall, possibly through another reverse split. Fail that, and delisting becomes a real prospect.

Underneath the share-price drama lies a broader strategic gamble. Diginex is trying to evolve from a holding company into a single integrated technology platform covering carbon accounting, sustainability reporting and supply-chain transparency — what it calls a “decarbonization platform.” The first major building block was the acquisition of PlanA.earth GmbH in January 2026, which gave it a European footprint. The next and far larger piece is Resulticks Global Companies, a provider of AI-driven customer loyalty technology.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?

The Resulticks deal was announced on April 16, 2026. Under its terms, Diginex would pay $1.5 billion for a business that is expected to contribute roughly $150 million in annual revenue and as much as $50 million in operating profit. Management’s target is to reach group revenue of $280 million by 2027. But closing the transaction has proved stubbornly difficult. The original long-stop date of May 29 was pushed to June 12, and then on June 17 another delay was announced, with the deadline now set for June 30. No guarantee exists that the deal will close by then.

Each delay has punished the stock. On the day of the third extension, shares fell 4.33%. The weakness appears company-specific; competitors did not show the same pattern. Investors seem willing to buy the ESG growth story — data-integrity platforms for compliance are gaining traction — but are losing patience with execution. Every missed deadline feeds doubt about whether Diginex can integrate the businesses it already owns while chasing more acquisitions.

To sharpen the messaging around the new structure, the company recently appointed Carole Zibi as chief marketing officer, tasked with building a unified brand for the platform. But marketing alone cannot resolve the two immediate questions: whether Resulticks will be absorbed by June 30, and whether the stock can climb back above $1.00 and stay there long enough to satisfy Nasdaq. The platform wager depends on both.

Diginex at a turning point? This analysis reveals what investors need to know now.

If the Resulticks deal falls through, the entire transformation — from reporting specialist to full-service operating platform — loses its centerpiece. If the share price cannot recover, the Nasdaq listing goes away, making future capital raises and acquisitions far harder. Diginex’s revenue growth over the past twelve months was 203%, but the company remains unprofitable. Two timelines, one outcome: come September, either the strategy holds together or it unravels.

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