Diginex has announced a $1.5 billion all-share acquisition of Resulticks, a global provider of real-time AI-driven customer intelligence solutions. The transaction marks a major strategic expansion for the company, moving it beyond its core sustainability RegTech positioning and into a broader platform built around data, artificial intelligence, and enterprise decision-making.
The scale of the transaction makes it significant. Resulticks brings an already sizable operating business, with approximately $150 million in calendar 2025 revenue and around $46 million in EBITDA, implying a margin of roughly 32%. Diginex is now positioning the deal as transformational, not only because of the financial impact, but because it changes the company’s business mix toward faster-growing, higher-margin revenue streams.
The deal sharply changes Diginex’s growth profile
A central reason this acquisition matters is the growth trajectory it brings. Resulticks is described as having delivered around 70% annual revenue growth over the last five years, with projected revenues of $190 million to $210 million in FY2026 and $250 million to $280 million in FY2027.
That changes the financial story around Diginex considerably. Rather than remaining a more narrowly defined sustainability technology business, the company is now attaching itself to a much larger AI and enterprise intelligence opportunity. The acquisition therefore appears designed to accelerate top-line expansion quickly while also giving investors a more aggressive growth narrative.
AI and sustainability are being combined into a single platform strategy
Diginex is presenting the combined business as the world’s first trust-led growth platform. The logic behind that claim is that Resulticks’ customer intelligence and agentic AI capabilities will be integrated with Diginex’s sustainability and compliance platforms, allowing businesses to connect customer engagement with sustainability performance and trust-based brand positioning.
This is important because many companies still treat customer experience, compliance, and sustainability as separate functions. Diginex is trying to build a model where those areas reinforce each other. In practical terms, that means using AI and data infrastructure not just to improve marketing or customer retention, but to help businesses communicate sustainability value in more measurable and commercially relevant ways.
The company is betting on trust as a commercial differentiator
One of the more notable strategic claims in the announcement is that the next generation of enterprise platforms will be built around trust as much as technology. Diginex and Resulticks are arguing that businesses will increasingly need to combine data, AI, and sustainability intelligence to create what they describe as trust-led experiences.
That matters because the acquisition is not being framed as a conventional software scale-up alone. It is being positioned around a wider market thesis: that customer loyalty, enterprise growth, and brand value will depend more heavily on how companies integrate ethical, environmental, and data-driven decision-making into real user engagement. Whether that thesis proves durable remains to be seen, but it clearly sits at the center of the strategic rationale for the deal.
Existing commercial ties reduced the distance to a full transaction
The acquisition also did not emerge in isolation. It builds on a strategic memorandum of understanding signed in June 2025 and follows a reseller agreement executed in February 2026 that was targeting $40 million in cumulative revenues over four years for Diginex’s sustainable RegTech business.
This prior relationship is important because it suggests the transaction is not a sudden shift into an unfamiliar area. Instead, Diginex appears to have used earlier commercial cooperation to test alignment before moving toward full acquisition. That can matter in platform deals where integration risk is often high, especially when combining two businesses with different product identities and growth profiles.
Resulticks brings scale in AI-led customer intelligence
From a capability perspective, Resulticks adds more than revenue. It gives Diginex access to an AI-driven customer intelligence platform already operating at scale, along with an enterprise framework focused on activation, attribution, and real-time decision support. This suggests the combined company wants to compete not only in compliance and sustainability intelligence, but more directly in enterprise software linked to data orchestration and customer experience.
That is a meaningful shift because it broadens Diginex’s relevance. Instead of speaking mainly to sustainability and reporting teams, the company may now also target growth, marketing, customer strategy, and enterprise AI functions. The acquisition therefore expands both the company’s addressable market and the complexity of the execution challenge ahead.
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The next challenge is integration and delivery
The transaction is expected to close within 30 to 45 days, subject to closing conditions. Once complete, the real test will be whether Diginex can successfully combine sustainability technology with AI-driven customer intelligence in a way that feels commercially coherent rather than loosely bundled.
That will matter because the strategic vision is ambitious. Building a platform that links customer engagement, AI, sustainability intelligence, and enterprise trust requires strong integration across products, data systems, and go-to-market strategy. The headline valuation and revenue projections are large, but future credibility will depend on whether the combined business can convert that story into execution and client demand.
What this acquisition signals
The broader signal is that sustainability technology companies are starting to push beyond reporting and compliance into wider enterprise intelligence territory. Diginex’s acquisition of Resulticks suggests that the next competitive phase may involve combining ESG capabilities with data infrastructure, AI automation, and commercial decision systems.
If that model works, Diginex could reposition itself from a Sustainability RegTech provider into a broader AI-led enterprise platform with a trust and compliance layer at its core. If it does not, the deal may be seen as an ambitious but difficult diversification move. Either way, the announcement makes one thing clear: Diginex is attempting to redefine its identity through scale, AI, and a much larger software market.
Source: Diginex
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Ankit Palan
Sustainability Content Strategist
Ankit Palan is a Canada based writer who has been writing about sustainability for the past four years. He focuses on making topics like climate change, ESG, and responsible business easier to understand and more relatable. His work looks at how sustainability plays out in the real world, across businesses, finance, and everyday decisions, without overcomplicating it.



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