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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 that its majority-owned unit trueGold is deploying a molecular-marking system that embeds a permanent, readable chemical tracer into gold to verify origin, purity, and ethical sourcing.
Independent Intertek testing is cited as confirming the marker is chemically inert and non-toxic, and the marker is said to meet EU REACH, RoHS, U.S. National Stamping Act, and Canada Precious Metals Marking Regulations. Partnerships with Ava Global and Fingo aim to preserve verification across logistics and human identity checkpoints, while European and global collaborators extend the tech into recycling and other materials.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) says its molecular markers and digital passports are moving from lab research to operational infrastructure across multiple industries and regions.
Key implementations include a government-backed national plastics passport in Singapore with A*STAR, REDWAVE-trained high-speed sorting for real-time tag detection, Tradepro distribution of verified rPET into U.S. markets, CARTIF pilots in Spain to accelerate EU rollouts, trueGold and Goldstrom embedding signatures into bullion, and CETI integration for traceable textiles.
SMX positions verification as a cross-sector compliance and commerce layer—from mining and metals to fashion and recycling.
SMX (NASDAQ: SMX) and Goldstrom announced a collaboration to embed SMX's patented molecular markers and a secure digital registry into gold and silver, creating permanent, tamper-proof traceability across the metals' life cycle.
The partnership links molecular marking, blockchain-based digital passports, and Goldstrom's global bullion banking, logistics, trading, vaulting, and insurance network to track origin, processing, recycling, and custody. The system is said to survive melting, refining, and recasting while shortening verification times and supporting regulatory standards such as LBMA Responsible Gold Guidance and the UAE Good Delivery system.
The companies position this as a compliance and commercial advantage that converts ESG and provenance data into measurable, tradable proof for refiners, banks, insurers, and investors.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) announced a global rollout of molecular verification partnerships that embed permanent chemical markers and digital passports into materials across sectors and regions on November 7, 2025.
Key deployments include a government-backed national plastics passport in Singapore with A*STAR, industrial real-time sorting integration with REDWAVE and Tradepro, European scaling via CARTIF in Spain, bullion authentication through trueGold and Goldstrom, and textile traceability with CETI in France. The company positions these partnerships as an infrastructure layer for compliance, circular supply chains, and verified trade.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) announced on November 7, 2025 six global partnerships to deploy molecular markers and digital passports that verify material origin and lifecycle across supply chains.
Key collaborations: A*STAR (Singapore national plastics passport), REDWAVE (industrial sorter verification), Tradepro (Miami distribution link), CARTIF (Spain/EU pilot acceleration), Goldstrom/trueGold (molecular identity for bullion), and CETI (textile traceability in France). The program aims to convert verification into operational infrastructure for regulators, brands, and investors.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) builds permanent molecular IDs for metal, plastic, rubber, textiles and precious metals, embedding traceability directly into materials that survives melt, mold, and recycle. The company links molecular markers to blockchain registries and commercial partners, enabling product-level proof of origin, recycled content, and ethical sourcing.
Key deployments include a Singapore national circularity platform with A*STAR, European pilots with REDWAVE, CETI, BASF, Continental AG, a Valladolid test zone with CARTIF, and bullion verification via majority-owned trueGold and Goldstrom. The London Bullion Market Association has accredited SMX's molecular gold marker as a Gold Bar Security Feature.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) announced a 2025 expansion of its molecular marking platform into six industries and four continents, positioning its technology as a verifiable identity for plastics, textiles, metals, and electronics.
Key developments include a Singapore plastics passport with A*STAR, European pilots with CARTIF and CETI, factory integration with REDWAVE, certified resin distribution via Tradepro, and precious‑metals identity with Goldstrom. SMX also introduced the Plastic Cycle Token (PCT), a blockchain‑backed tradable instrument for verified recycled content.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is receiving broad media recognition for a molecular marker traceability platform that embeds invisible markers in materials and records transfers on-chain. Coverage from Rolling Stone, USA Today, and OPIS highlights pilots and industry partnerships across Asia-Pacific and Europe.
Key disclosed items: an A*STAR pilot targeting a 30% rise in recycling and a 50% cut in incineration by 2030; regional tests with CARTIF and CETI; planned collaboration with Tradepro; and integrations with Goldstrom and REDWAVE to extend traceability to metals and automated sorting.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is positioning its molecular marking and digital passport technology as the backbone for verified supply chains and material provenance. The company says it is working with Singapore's A*STAR on a national plastics passport, Spain's CARTIF and France's CETI on validated industrial and textile use cases, Austria's REDWAVE on smart sorting, U.S. partner Tradepro on certified recycled bales, and Singapore-based Goldstrom on tracing precious metals.
SMX frames these partnerships as building a global infrastructure that turns traceability into commercial value and regulatory-ready proof.
SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) on November 5, 2025 said its molecular‑tagging technology is moving from pilot to infrastructure through multiple commercial and government collaborations. Key deployments include a government‑backed national plastics passport with A*STAR in Singapore, industrial integration with REDWAVE and Tradepro for certified rPET, a European testbed with CARTIF in Spain, molecular identifiers for precious metals with Goldstrom, and textile traceability pilots with CETI in France.
SMX positions its markers as a global proof layer for supply chains, compliance, recycling, and product authenticity.