Diginex Faces Make-or-Break Moment as Resulticks Deadline Slips to Third Extension
18.06.2026 - 21:12:48 | boerse-global.de
The clock is running down on Diginex’s most consequential transaction. The ESG data specialist has pushed back the closing date for its $1.5 billion acquisition of Resulticks for a third time, with both sides now staring at a final deadline of 30 June.
Originally scheduled to close in late May, the deal was first extended to 12 June and then again to the end of the month. The latest postponement, confirmed on 17 June, underscores the lingering uncertainties around the outstanding conditions that remain unmet. Diginex itself has acknowledged that there is no guarantee the transaction will go through — a failure to close is explicitly on the table.
The numbers at stake are eye-catching. Resulticks, a loyalty and customer-engagement platform operating across North America, Asia and the Middle East, is expected to contribute around $150 million in annual revenue, with an operating profit of between $46 million and $50 million. For Diginex, whose core business centres on sustainability data and reporting for governments and corporations, the acquisition would represent a dramatic expansion into real-time decision-making and customer-retention tools.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Diginex?
Yet the financial picture at the acquirer remains stretched. Diginex’s own revenue surged 203 per cent in its most recent reporting period, but the company continues to post net losses. Its balance sheet looks thin relative to the multi-billion-dollar price tag of the planned purchase, even after previous bolt-on acquisitions worth over $100 million.
Investors have taken a dim view of the mounting uncertainty. The stock now trades at roughly $0.91, representing a decline of 7.3 per cent over the past month. The secondary source notes a similar figure of $0.92 with a roughly 6 per cent slide, but both data points paint the same picture: a company under pressure at the market’s edge. The implied volatility stands at a staggering 126 per cent, reflecting extreme nervousness among traders.
Technical indicators reinforce the bearish sentiment. The relative strength index has fallen to 31.8, a level that signals deeply oversold conditions. The secondary reading of 32.7 is in the same territory, leaving little room for further deterioration before a potential bounce — unless the deal itself collapses.
For Diginex’s management, the next few days are critical. Either the remaining contractual conditions are satisfied by 30 June — or the $1.5 billion deal evaporates, taking with it the planned revenue engine that was meant to transform the company’s business model. With no contractual guarantee of completion, the outcome hangs entirely on the ability of both parties to iron out the last hurdles.
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