When a transaction is announced, the first reaction is often immediate and mechanical.

Pricing. Share terms. Exchange ratios. Those details are easy to isolate, easy to compare, and easy to debate. They provide a surface-level framework for understanding what has happened.

What they do not always provide is a clear view of what is being added. More importantly, they rarely explain why the structure has been designed the way it has.

That distinction is increasingly relevant in the case of Diginex Limited (NASDAQ:DGNX), following its clarification of the terms associated with its planned $1.5 billion acquisition of AI-driven enterprise platform Resulticks. In focusing primarily on dilution, the relationship between share issuance and immediate operating performance is not always being fully accounted for. As a result, the accretive characteristics of the business being integrated may be underappreciated relative to the price being paid. That reaction is understandable, but only to a point.

This transaction reflects an implied consideration value of approximately $10.56 per share on a post-reverse split basis, derived from the agreed exchange terms and serving as the valuation at which the acquisition is being executed.

In many transactions, dilution is tied to future potential. Capital is raised, shares are issued, and the anticipated benefits are expected to materialize over time.

This transaction is structured differently.