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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) 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.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) completed six live commercial partnerships in 2025 and showcased those deployments at the DMCC Precious Metals Conference on November 24, 2025. The agreements span bullion logistics, refinery and assay, sovereign-focused metals sourcing, industrial alloy feedstock, recycled-plastics traceability, and global maritime chain-of-custody verification.
Each partnership was described as deployed and operational, embedding molecular tracking and chain-of-custody verification across vault-to-vault transfers, smelting/recasting, cross-border flows, heavy manufacturing feedstock, recycled resin supply chains, and shipping routes.
The company framed 2025 as a pivot year in which consistent, multi-industry deployments moved SMX from proof-of-concept toward an operational verification ecosystem.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) announced it entered the 2025 DMCC Precious Metals Conference in Dubai on November 24, 2025, after completing six signed, deployed partnerships across precious metals, industrial verification, compliance and logistics.
The company presented its molecular memory technology as an active, commercialized solution that the gold industry can use for traceability, circularity, and regulatory alignment. SMX positioned the partnerships as proof of scale rather than future promises and used the DMCC forum to consolidate market momentum.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) unveiled a molecular memory verification system at the DMCC 2025 Precious Metals Conference on November 26, 2025 that embeds origin and history into gold itself.
The technology claims to make each bar intrinsically verifiable so identity cannot be erased by melting, recasting, or paperwork, implying a potential industry reset in pricing, vault acceptance, and refinery practices if adopted by Dubai market authorities.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) presented at the 2025 DMCC Precious Metals Conference on November 26, 2025, demonstrating a molecular identity method that embeds verifiable chemical signatures into materials.
The company showed the signature surviving refining and supply‑chain processes for gold, and surviving harsh chemical and manufacturing steps for rubber, textiles, rare earths, plastics, and electronics. SMX argues this makes materials self‑verifying, limits fraud, and could shift verification from documents to embedded chemistry across global trade.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) demonstrated a molecular-level tracing system at the 2025 DMCC Precious Metals Conference in Dubai that the release describes as surviving melting, vaulting, transport, and manufacturing processes.
The company showed use cases across gold, natural rubber, textiles, rare earths, and electronics, and named early adopters including Goldstrom, Brink's, and truGold. The presentation is framed as a potential industry standard for provenance, anti‑tampering, and regulatory compliance with strategic implications for supply chains and national materials security.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) presented its molecular-identity technology at the DMCC 2025 Precious Metals Conference in Dubai on November 26, 2025, demonstrating embedded chemical signatures that survive smelting, transport, recasting, auditing, vault rotation, and resale.
The company showed proof-of-concept in gold and highlighted cross-sector applications—rubber (21 tons tracked end-to-end), textiles, rare earths, plastics, and electronics—arguing the technology can provide immutable supply-chain identity and counter counterfeit or tampering risks.
DMCC’s endorsement positioned SMX as a potential enabler of new industry standards for material-level traceability.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) presented at the DMCC Precious Metals Conference on November 26, 2025, demonstrating a molecular verification system that links material identity to an unbroken chain of custody.
The presentation argued gold served as the stress test: SMX showed its chemistry survives refinery, transport, melting and vault inspection, and the company positioned that proof as a potential industrial standard for other commodities, including natural rubber, textiles, rare earths and electronics.
DMCC's market role and Goldstrom's early integration were cited as signals of industry appetite and potential cross‑sector adoption.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is presenting technology at the DMCC Precious Metals Conference that embeds permanent identity into gold, aiming to turn provenance into a measurable asset feature rather than external paperwork. The company argues that verified gold reduces settlement delays, custody disputes, and regulatory friction, which can raise pricing and liquidity for metal with an internal, permanent fingerprint. SMX says Dubai's DMCC hub will accelerate adoption by institutions that prefer assets with objective identity, enabling cleaner custody, faster trading, and tighter pricing.