Diginex Launches End-to-End Supply Chain Solution While Resulticks Merger Clock Ticks Down
20.06.2026 - 13:43:27 | boerse-global.de
Regulators across the globe are tightening the noose on corporate supply chains, and Diginex is racing to build the software infrastructure that companies will need to comply. The UK Modern Slavery Act, Australia’s equivalent, Canada’s Fighting Against Forced Labour Act, and the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive — alongside Germany’s own Lieferkettensorgfaltspflichtengesetz and the EU Forced Labour Regulation — are forcing businesses to document risks with hard evidence, not just declarations.
The market for human rights and supply chain due diligence software is estimated at $3.8 billion in 2025 and is projected to swell to $9.6 billion by 2034, driven by stricter rules, investor pressure and rising demand for responsible sourcing. Diginex launched its response in June 2026: a unified "Risk-to-Remedy" platform that stitches together its LUMEN risk-assessment tool, the APPRISE worker engagement module and expertise from The Remedy Project on grievance mechanisms. The logic is coherent — a single system covering risk assessment, carbon accounting, legal reporting and direct worker feedback.
Yet for all the regulatory tailwind, the company’s stock tells a more nervous story. At $0.90, Diginex shares have shed 19.64% over the past 30 days, with a relative strength index of 31.5 signalling oversold territory. The market capitalisation stands at roughly €25.63 million, and annualised volatility of 125.69% underscores just how jumpy the paper is on any news.
Many businesses are turning to practical tools to stay ahead of compliance demands. Over 37,000 UK companies already use a free Risk Assessment Toolkit that provides 41 ready-to-use templates and checklists for everything from fire safety to lone working. It helps document workplace hazards with the hard evidence regulators now expect. Download the free Risk Assessment Toolkit
That skittishness traces directly to the drawn-out acquisition of Resulticks. The deal, first announced on April 16, 2026, has already been extended once. On June 17, Diginex and Resulticks pushed the so-called long-stop date — the final deadline for closing — to June 30, 2026. It is now the second extension, and whether all conditions will be met remains an open question.
Resulticks is no small add-on. The target brings roughly $150 million in annual revenue and $46 million to $50 million in EBITDA. The acquisition would shift Diginex from a pure sustainability-data play toward real-time decision-making and customer engagement — effectively a redefinition of the business model. Market observers are weighing the operational logic against the execution risk: acquisition-related announcements have repeatedly triggered negative price reactions at Diginex, even when the underlying news was strategically positive.
Inside the company, the leadership is repositioning for the next phase. Carole Zibi, a former LinkedIn strategist, was appointed chief marketing officer in June to help consolidate the fragmented market into a single platform. Meanwhile, the Matter subsidiary has pushed its carbon-data capture toward far greater automation, cutting compliance costs for large clients. The building blocks are there — but without Resulticks, the platform strategy lacks a critical lever for customer growth.
All eyes now turn to June 30. If the deal closes, Diginex will have the operational heft to capitalise on the regulatory wave. If it collapses, the company will be left with a compelling vision and strong foundations, but without the engine to scale it. The extended deadline is supposed to buy room for last-minute conditions, but the market is already pricing in the possibility that time runs out.
