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SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company provides molecular marking and digital traceability technology for physical materials across supply chains. Company updates focus on embedded invisible markers, secure digital records, authentication, recycled-content verification, chain-of-custody data, and the use of material identity systems in plastics, metals, textiles, precious materials, and other industrial inputs.
Recent developments also center on the Digital Material Passport Platform, which connects marked materials to persistent digital records for origin, composition, lifecycle history, compliance reporting, and material sorting. SMX news commonly links these systems to circular-economy infrastructure, verified recycled plastics, audit-grade documentation, and tokenization concepts for real-world industrial materials.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) says it is embedding a permanent molecular identity into gold and silver, producing bars that retain provenance through melting, recycling, and recasting. The technology aims to convert bullion from trust-based to self-authenticating material, addressing gaps in purity and origin documentation.
The company positions its system as a new global benchmark for verified bullion, enabling refiners, vaults, traders, and regulators to confirm origin and chain of custody at the material level rather than via paperwork.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) announced technology that embeds molecular identifiers into gold and silver, enabling bars to carry verifiable origin, purity, and recycling history inside the material itself. The company says this approach replaces certificate-based verification with a permanent, material-level record that survives melting and recasting.
SMX also describes expanding partnerships across plastics, textiles, natural rubber, electronics, rare earths, and industrial recycling to scale a unified architecture where physical assets self-report provenance, aiming to speed settlements, reduce disputes, and increase insurer, regulator, and buyer confidence.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) announced a molecular-level method that gives rare earth elements a persistent, self-verifying identity that the company says survives crushing, separation, purification, and final manufacturing.
The technology aims to address opaque supply chains and enable governments and manufacturers to verify material origin without relying on paperwork or third-party claims, positioning verification capacity as a strategic differentiator for EV, wind, semiconductor, and defense supply chains.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) introduced molecular-level verification for aerospace metals on November 28, 2025, embedding durable chemical signatures into titanium, vanadium, and specialty alloys that survive melting, forging and heat treatment.
The system creates permanent traceability from raw ore to finished component, aiming to replace fragile paperwork with materials that can self-confirm origin, purity and processing history. SMX positions this technology as a compliance and engineering layer for aerospace, defense and advanced manufacturing supply chains.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) and Dubai Multi Commodities Centre (DMCC) are positioning Dubai as a global center for verified gold by embedding chemical markers into gold and silver that persist through melting and processing.
The DMCC is integrating material-level verification into refining, trading, and vaulting, aiming to reduce sourcing opacity, speed settlement, and lower compliance friction. Verified bars are presented as commanding a market premium because they carry permanent, traceable identity rather than paperwork alone.
This shift is framed as creating a new global benchmark that pulls trade and liquidity toward Dubai as buyers and institutions prioritize verifiable authenticity.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) has embedded molecular-level identity into materials so metals, minerals, plastics and components carry verifiable provenance. This approach replaces assumption-based paperwork with material-based verification to reduce bottlenecks, speed compliance, and strengthen chain-of-custody across borders.
Dubai’s DMCC is aligning its logistics strategy with SMX’s identity layer, positioning the region as a verification hub that can lower trade disputes and improve regulatory certainty for goods like gold and silver.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) has been adopted by DMCC as a molecular verification solution that embeds a permanent chemical identity into metals, minerals, and industrial materials.
DMCC hosted SMX at the DMCC Precious Metals Conference and is cultivating partnerships across vaulting, logistics, and refining to make Dubai a verifiable trading environment that proves purity, provenance, and recycled content at the material level.
This shift aims to replace paper trails with embedded identity and positions Dubai as an early mover in verified global commodities trade.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) positioned its molecular identity technology at the DMCC Precious Metals Conference on November 26, 2025, presenting a verification system designed to embed provenance into gold and other metals.
The release argues Dubai's DMCC is raising global standards for traceability and that SMX's markers survive melting, recasting, storage, and transport, aiming to replace fragile paper trails and removable labels with an in-metal identity layer to improve auditability and cross-border confidence.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) announced a run of six strategic partnerships in 2025 that together create a global network for molecular‑level material verification across Singapore, Spain, France, Dubai, and the United States. The deals span manufacturing, recycling integration, logistics integrity, and raw‑material authenticity, and the company says this footprint now operates across four major economies.
SMX presented these developments at the DMCC Precious Metals Conference on November 24–25, 2025, arguing gold can carry a persistent molecular identity rather than rely on paperwork. Regulators across four continents reportedly noticed, and the company frames the sequence as a shift from pilot testing to global deployment ahead of 2026.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) completed six partnerships in 2025 that, according to the release, shifted market perception from skepticism to adoption of molecular verification as a common standard.
The deals are described as a chain reaction: early agreements proved commercial readiness and scalability, later ones reinforced regulatory and circular‑economy use cases, and the sequence culminated with broader market recognition at the DMCC Precious Metals Conference in November 2025.
The company frames these agreements as creating a cross‑industry verification network and a scalable verification architecture rather than a simple client pipeline.