-
Serena set for remarkable Wimbledon return, Swiatek survives scare
-
Defending champ Swiatek survives scare to reach Wimbledon second round
-
Africa EV firm Spiro accused of torturing Uganda employees
-
US Supreme Court upholds state bans on transgender athletes in school
-
PSG's Portugal forward Ramos signs five-year AC Milan deal
-
Tourists soldier on in Rome despite heatwave
-
Inflation slows in top eurozone economies as ECB ponders next move
-
Record number of 'new millionaires' in 2025, says UBS
-
Starmer boosts budget to modernise UK military before exit
-
UN calls for food, shelter to help Venezuela quake survivors
-
Stocks mostly higher, yen stays near 40-year low against dollar
-
Merz faces mockery over praise of Germany's World Cup team
-
Data centres emitting more CO2 than thought: study
-
Ride-share group BlaBlaCar taps AI for 20-country expansion
-
Over 1 million migrants apply for Spain's mass regularisation
-
Escaping heat, forgetting war: Kyiv locals hit the beach
-
Germany questions footballing identity after fresh World Cup failure
-
Thousands march to demand illegal migrants leave South Africa
-
MEXC Lists Ondo's Tokenized Strategy Preferred Stock on Spot Market
-
Serena set for remarkable Wimbledon return
-
Stocks climb, yen stays near 40-year low against dollar
-
Outgoing UK PM Starmer announces 'record' defence spending
-
Swim star Marchand limps out of French nationals as Europeans loom
-
Paralluelo joins Barca women's departures
-
UN says transport infrastructure must adapt to climate
-
Police hunt for Monaco bomb suspect after Ukrainian-born businessman wounded
-
Sommer, Acerbi, Darmian, De Vrij leave Inter Milan
-
Sommer, Acerbi, Darmian leave Inter Milan
-
Germany's labour market dilemma: rising unemployment despite vacancies
-
'Waiting like torture': Turks despair as Schengen visa delays mount
-
Skating allows Russian, Belarussians to return as neutrals
-
Venezuela rescuers in final push to find survivors as families mourn
-
Russian double Olympic figure skating champion Dmitriev dies aged 58
-
Over 1 million migrants apply for Spain's mass regularisation: PM
-
S. Africa deploys police as anti-migrant protests loom
-
Thousands from Philippine sect protest pro-Duterte senator's graft case
-
Monaco parcel bomb blast wounds Ukrainian oligarch
-
South Africa repatriations top 25,000 ahead of anti-immigrant ultimatum
-
Sweden face France's attacking firepower at the World Cup
-
Taiwan raids tech firms in China AI chip smuggling probe
-
Online same-sex romance series embrace AI 'freedom'
-
Morocco 'unstoppable' says coach after Netherlands thriller
-
New Oxford academic centre symbolises UK's big-donor era
-
Russia's small businesses pay the price of spiralling Ukraine war
-
Trump says Iran meeting set in Qatar, despite uncertainty
-
Paraguay shock Germany as Brazil, Morocco advance at World Cup
-
Morocco down Netherlands to reach World Cup last 16
-
NASA robot mission aiming to rescue space telescope
-
Asian stocks unable to track Wall St higher, yen holds at 40-year low
-
Mouse-that-roared Paraguay savors World Cup win over Germany
The Proof Economy Is No Longer Theoretical, Diginex Is Already Monetizing It
BOCA RATON, FL / ACCESS Newswire / December 19, 2025 / For years, corporate accountability lived in presentations. ESG decks, sustainability summaries, carefully worded disclosures. They were designed to reassure, not withstand pressure. That era is over. What's replacing it is far more unforgiving. Regulators, investors, auditors, and commercial partners are no longer asking companies what they intend to do. They are asking what they can prove.
This is not a philosophical shift. It is an operational one. And it is creating an entirely new layer of corporate infrastructure, the verification layer.
Diginex (NASDAQ:DGNX) has been building for this moment. On December 9, the company reported financial results for the six-month period ended September 30, and the numbers didn't just show growth. They showed validation. Revenue increased 293% year over year, driven by platform licensing, subscriptions, and enterprise adoption. Gross margins expanded into the mid-70% range, showing the scalability of a software model built for global compliance demand.
These results are not happening in a vacuum. They are happening because proof has become mandatory.
When Scrutiny Rises, Narratives Collapse
Most ESG and compliance platforms were designed for an earlier phase of regulation, one that emphasized disclosure over defensibility. They helped companies compile information and publish progress. That approach breaks down the moment enforcement arrives.
Today's regulatory environment does not tolerate ambiguity. Emissions disclosures must be auditable. Supply chains must be traceable. Human-rights claims must be supported by documented remediation, not just policies. When regulators ask questions, "we reported it" is no longer a sufficient answer.
This is where many legacy systems fail. They organize data, but they do not authenticate it.
Diginex was built with that distinction in mind. The company's platform suite is designed to move beyond reporting and into verification, capturing data in a way that can be traced, reviewed, and defended. That difference is increasingly becoming the line between companies that pass scrutiny and those that stall operations, lose contracts, or face penalties.
The financials tell that story clearly. A triple-digit percentage revenue increase in a tightening regulatory climate signals something important. Companies are not pulling back on compliance spend. They are reallocating it toward systems that can survive audits and enforcement. Like Diginex's.
From Detection to Remediation, One System
Over the past several quarters, Diginex has quietly assembled a stack that mirrors how accountability actually works in the real world.
The memorandum of understanding to acquire Kindred OS adds AI-driven detection at the edge of global supply chains, identifying early risk signals before they escalate into violations. The memorandum of understanding to acquire The Remedy Project brings structured remediation into the workflow, a critical requirement under modern human-rights and forced-labor regulations where identification alone is not enough.
Layered on top is diginexGHG, the company's AI-powered emissions engine, designed to automate and validate greenhouse gas calculations across Scope 1, 2, and 3. Together with Diginex's audit-ready ESG reporting tools, the platform begins to resemble something far more consequential than a dashboard.
It becomes infrastructure.
This matters because accountability is no longer linear. Detection without remediation fails audits. Reporting without verification fails enforcement. Emissions calculations without defensibility fail investor diligence. Diginex's approach connects these pieces into a single system designed for how regulators actually operate today.
Why the Market Is Responding Now
The timing is exact. Regulatory frameworks across Europe, the United States, and Asia are converging around a single expectation, that companies must demonstrate compliance, not declare it.
That convergence is already reshaping buying behavior. Boards are prioritizing systems that reduce regulatory exposure rather than decorate reports. Compliance teams are moving away from manual processes that cannot scale under enforcement. Investors are pressing for data that holds up under scrutiny, not assumptions dressed as metrics.
Diginex resides squarely at that intersection. Its revenue growth reflects organizations making real purchasing decisions around proof-grade data, not experimental pilots or marketing exercises. Expanding margins reinforce a critical point. This demand is not episodic. It is structural.
In other words, verification is not a project with an end date. It is a permanent operating requirement. The companies that control how verifiable data is captured, authenticated, and defended will sit at the center of regulatory and commercial workflows for decades. That is where leverage forms. That is where switching costs rise. That is where demand becomes durable.
Diginex is already operating at, and serving, that layer.
About Diginex
Diginex is a sustainability data company that helps organizations collect, manage, verify, and report ESG and impact data. Its solutions enable companies to comply with global regulations, improve supply chain transparency, and accelerate decarbonization efforts. Diginex combines technology, data science, and reporting expertise to create tools that make sustainability measurable, verifiable, and actionable.
Forward-Looking Statements
Certain statements in this announcement are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties and are based on the Company's current expectations and projections about future events that the Company believes may affect its financial condition, results of operations, business strategy and financial needs. Investors can identify these forward-looking statements by words or phrases such as "approximates," "believes," "hopes," "expects," "anticipates," "estimates," "projects," "intends," "plans," "will," "would," "should," "could," "may" or other similar expressions. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent occurring events or circumstances, or changes in its expectations, except as may be required by law. Although the Company believes that the expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, it cannot assure you that such expectations will turn out to be correct, and the Company cautions investors that actual results may differ materially from the anticipated results and encourages investors to review other factors that may affect its future results disclosed in the Company's filings with the SEC.
Media contact for this content: [email protected]
SOURCE: Diginex Limited
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
R.Garcia--AT