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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 on November 24, 2025 that its majority-owned subsidiary trueGold uses molecular-marking technology to embed a permanent, invisible chemical record into gold, enabling rapid provenance, purity, and ethical-source verification without cutting or melting.
Independent testing by Intertek reportedly found the marker chemically inert and compliant with EU REACH, RoHS, U.S. National Stamping Act, and Canadian Precious Metals Marking Regulations. trueGold has commercial partnerships with Goldstrom, Ava Global, and Fingo to scale authenticated gold into industrial circulation and secure logistics and digital identity.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) says its technology defends institutions by linking physical materials to a verifiable provenance, aiming to stop subtle supply‑chain infiltration that can turn into digital manipulation. The company describes threats that exploit trusted components, parts, and products to evade protocols, then blend into operations. SMX’s system embeds a molecular identity into materials (gold, rubber, liquids, textiles and more) so origins and tampering can be detected and counterfeits exposed. The release says SMX is gaining deal traction across continents and positions its technology as a way to secure both physical inputs and downstream digital systems.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) positions its molecular-marking technology as a hardware-level authentication system that embeds invisible chemical identifiers into materials during manufacturing.
The markers are described as immutable, instantly verifiable with a proprietary scanner, and recordable on blockchain ledgers to create a chain of custody from raw material to finished product. SMX says deployments are already in place at industrial scale across gold, rubber, plastics, and textiles, and the company is pursuing extensions into semiconductors, critical minerals, and defense components.
The announcement frames the approach as a physical complement to software security, aiming to prevent counterfeiting and supply-chain substitution by making authenticity intrinsic to the material.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) has advanced a molecular marking platform that embeds indestructible IDs into materials to enable permanent, verifiable supply-chain traceability.
Key developments include a 2023 adoption inflection point, partnerships with A*STAR in Singapore, REDWAVE in Austria, CETI in France, Continental AG, and CARTIF in Spain, a majority-owned subsidiary trueGold for precious metals, a commercial tie-up with Goldstrom, and accreditation of its molecular marker by the London Bullion Market Association.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) positions itself as a scalable solution to recent global supply‑chain integrity rules by offering a molecular identity platform and a proprietary scanner that verifies material origin in seconds. The company says it built this infrastructure before regulators tightened standards and highlights a national partnership with Singapore's A*STAR and six partnerships secured so far in 2025. SMX also promotes a Plastic Cycle Token that converts authenticated recycled plastic into a tradable value layer intended to streamline compliance and enforcement.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) advocates strengthening U.S. infrastructure by embedding material identity and traceability at the point of origin to enable end-to-end verification across supply chains.
The company says its molecular identity system is operational today in sectors including natural rubber, precious metals, recycling, advanced manufacturing, and hardware supply chains, aiming to reduce unverified components and improve resilience of electricity, water, transport, logistics, and communications.
SMX positions verification as a practical, deployable tool to protect critical infrastructure and national resilience.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) launched its operating system for physical materials with six partnerships across three continents, effective November 14, 2025. The system embeds molecular marking and persistent digital identities into plastics, metals, textiles, and recycled inputs so materials carry verifiable data through production, processing, and resale.
Key deployments: a national-level plastics identity in Singapore; industrial verification nodes in Austria linked to U.S. distribution via Tradepro Miami; an industrial/regulatory installation in Spain; molecular identity for gold and silver across refining and resale; and a consumer-material fiber layer in France. These layers aim to make materials traceable, auditable, and compliant.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) announced Singapore is building a national plastics passport using SMX molecular identification technology, dated November 14, 2025. The system embeds immutable molecular identity into polymers so items carry verifiable composition and history, enabling instant validation of recycled content, safety standards, and supply‑chain provenance.
The national layer is positioned as a blueprint for ASEAN adoption, aiming to convert circularity from voluntary claims into an enforceable digital‑physical infrastructure that supports verified recycled materials and authenticated supply chains.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) says its molecular marking system is being deployed across plastics, textiles, metals and trade goods to create a verifiable, material-level identity for supply chains.
The company cites regional pilots and collaborations — including A*STAR in Singapore, Tradepro in the United States, CARTIF in Spain, CETI in France, Goldstrom in Singapore, and REDWAVE in Austria — as examples of real-world integration that speed customs clearance, enable sustainability-linked financing, and support circular-economy goals.
SMX positions its platform as a persistent, non‑eroding marker paired with the Plastic Cycle Token to turn recycled content into a tradable, auditable commodity.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) unveiled a molecular digital identity layer for physical goods on November 14, 2025, embedding unique molecular signatures into raw materials like leather, polymers, metals, and fibers.
The system creates a permanent, material-linked birth certificate readable across a product's lifecycle, enabling real-time authentication, reducing manual verification costs, and turning resale platforms into trust engines. SMX cites integrations with innovation partners A*STAR, CETI, and Aegis Packaging to deploy the solution at manufacturing.