Author: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

  • SMX’s Operating System for Physical Materials Is Now Live In Six Countries

    SMX’s Operating System for Physical Materials Is Now Live In Six Countries

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 14, 2025 / For decades, industries have treated physical goods and digital systems as separate worlds. Software evolved. Data evolved. Connectivity evolved. But the materials that power global trade remained static, unverifiable, and silent. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is changing that divide by creating something unprecedented: a global operating system for physical matter.

    This operating system is not installed on servers or devices. It lives inside the materials themselves. Through molecular marking and data-linked identities, SMX enables plastics, metals, textiles, and recycled inputs to behave like governed, trackable assets rather than anonymous commodities.

    Six major partnerships across three continents are now running on this new layer, turning raw materials into data-ready participants in the world economy. This is not an upgrade. It is a full redesign of how materials work. Or, better said, material efficiency.

    Singapore Installs the Public Sector Layer

    Singapore’s collaboration with SMX and A*STAR functions like the first national deployment of the operating system. The country is assigning persistent digital identities to plastics as they move through production, consumption, and reuse.

    This is not a pilot or a proof of concept. It is equivalent to installing the OS at the governmental level, enabling recycling incentives, compliance schemes, and industrial reporting to operate on verified data rather than estimated inputs. Singapore becomes the first nation where materials can run natively on the SMX architecture.

    Austria Turns Machines Into System Nodes

    In Austria, SMX and REDWAVE are pulling industrial automation directly into the operating system. Sorting machines that once separated plastics by type can now read and validate identity on the fly, turning conveyor belts into verification nodes and transforming recycling lines into real-time data streams.

    Instead of producing material that must later be questioned or audited, these facilities generate output that is certified at the moment of processing. When this verified material enters Tradepro’s distribution network in Miami, it flows seamlessly into U.S. supply chains that increasingly require documented recycled content as a condition of participation.

    Spain Deploys the Industrial Layer

    Through CARTIF, Spain is installing the operating system inside the industrial environments that shape Europe’s circular-economy ambitions. The collaboration embeds molecular identity into pilot facilities that support packaging, construction materials, renewable components, and recycling technologies.

    These locations function as installation zones where SMX’s architecture is woven directly into European manufacturing workflows. In a region where proof is rapidly becoming mandatory, the operating system shifts from an optional enhancement to the foundation that enables companies to stay compliant and competitive.

    Gold and Silver Receive System-Level Identity

    The financial layer is established through trueGold and Goldstrom, bringing precious metals into the operating system for the first time. Gold and silver can now carry a molecular ID that persists through melting, casting, vaulting, and resale, allowing the metals to behave as authenticated digital objects rather than static commodities.

    Refiners gain precision in tracking provenance, banks gain certainty when assessing collateral, and auditors gain clarity in verifying inventory and movement. After centuries of reliance on stamps, certificates, and trust, gold and silver become system-aware materials whose identities cannot be forged or lost.

    France Installs the Consumer-Material Layer

    CETI in France is integrating SMX identity into fibers and fabrics, giving the textile sector an operating system it has never had. For decades, fashion relied on labels, supplier declarations, and marketing narratives to explain where materials came from and how they were made. Now, identity is embedded at the fiber level itself, turning every thread into a carrier of verifiable truth. Sustainability claims become measurable rather than symbolic, fiber blends become certifiable rather than estimated, and recycled content becomes traceable with a level of precision the industry has never achieved.

    This shift reaches far beyond compliance. It changes how brands design collections, how manufacturers qualify suppliers, and how retailers price goods tied to environmental performance. Investors gain access to datasets that withstand scrutiny, and regulators gain a mechanism to enforce standards without relying on voluntary disclosures. Consumers, meanwhile, gain something the fashion world has always promised but rarely delivered: transparency they can trust.

    As identity becomes inseparable from the fabric, textiles stop living in the realm of slogans and start functioning as proof-bearing products. The result is a consumer-material layer in which every garment participates in the broader verification ecosystem, carrying its history, composition, and integrity throughout its lifecycle.

    A Global Operating System Takes Shape

    Each partnership adds a new layer to the operating system, and together they form a structure that behaves like a digital stack for the physical world. Singapore establishes the national layer, proving that a country can run its plastics economy on verified material identity rather than assumptions. In Austria and the United States, REDWAVE and Tradepro expand the system into the industrial and commercial layers, where machinery and distribution channels begin treating materials as certifiable data instead of anonymous inputs.

    Spain’s CARTIF contributes to the regulatory layer, ensuring that verification becomes inseparable from European circular-economy standards and compliance frameworks. Goldstrom adds the financial layer by giving gold and silver a molecular identity that functions like a secure credential inside the metals market. And in France, CETI completes the consumer layer by weaving identity directly into the textiles people wear, buy, recycle, and return to the value chain.

    Layer by layer, the operating system becomes fully dimensional, spanning nations, factories, regulators, investors, and consumers until the entire material world begins operating on the same foundation of verified truth.

    As these layers link together, the world shifts from unverifiable supply chains to authenticated material ecosystems. The OS becomes self-propelling. Adoption accelerates because verified materials outperform unverifiable ones. Compliance becomes simpler. Fraud becomes harder. Waste becomes measurable. Value becomes traceable.

    SMX is not simply scaling a technology. It is installing a global operating system for how physical materials participate in commerce. And for the first time, the world is ready to run on it.

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This editorial contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include statements that are not historical facts and reflect current expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions, or strategies regarding future events. Words such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “contemplate,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “intend,” “may,” “might,” “plan,” “possible,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “will,” “would,” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying terms.

    Forward-looking statements in this editorial include, for example, statements regarding SMX’s partnership activities in Singapore, Europe, and the United States, the development and expansion of its molecular marking technology, the potential creation and growth of an Internet of Materials, expected benefits from collaborations with A*STAR, REDWAVE, Tradepro, CARTIF, Goldstrom, and CETI, the potential for national and industrial-scale implementation of SMX systems, the anticipated role of molecular traceability in global supply chains, and expectations relating to SMX’s future products, services, growth strategy, commercial adoption, and technology roadmap.

    These forward-looking statements are based on information available as of the date of publication and reflect current expectations, forecasts, assumptions, and judgments. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks, uncertainties, and factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied.

    Factors that may cause actual results to differ include changes in applicable laws or regulations, the ability of SMX and its partners to successfully develop, deploy, and commercialize molecular verification technologies, the timing and success of integration into manufacturing and recycling systems, market acceptance of SMX’s solutions, industry adoption rates for traceability and digital passport systems, the ability to protect and enforce intellectual property rights, the availability of financing to support future growth, competitive pressures within the verification and materials technology sectors, and economic or supply chain disruptions that could impact the industries SMX serves.

    Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date they are made. SMX undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this editorial except as required by applicable securities laws.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • Spain Becomes Europe’s Proof Engine as SMX and CARTIF Reinvent Circularity

    Spain Becomes Europe’s Proof Engine as SMX and CARTIF Reinvent Circularity

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 14, 2025 / Every region that grows eventually confronts a question it cannot ignore: who can prove what actually happened. Europe hit that point the moment regulators began tying economic incentives to measurable sustainability. Suddenly, recycling claims were not enough. Companies needed evidence. Industries needed confidence. Governments needed traceable performance.

    Spain answered that call first. In Valladolid, a new model for industrial growth is taking shape through a collaboration between SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) and CARTIF,one of Europe’s most influential applied research hubs. Their work is turning the idea of a circular economy into something concrete and accountable, functioning as both a scientific system and an economic engine.

    The Castilla y León region has long been an industrial heavyweight, with an annual output of billions. Now it is positioning itself as something deeper. Growth will not hinge on volume. It will hinge on verifiable value. That shift begins with the way materials are traced, authenticated, and reintegrated into production cycles.

    Where Spain’s Industrial Base Meets Molecular Truth

    SMX provides the foundation. Its molecular tracing system allows materials to carry their own identity, a physical signature that stays embedded throughout manufacturing, reuse, and recycling. It functions like a memory. Once applied, the marker bonds at the molecular level, creating a digital passport that travels with the material at every stage.

    This gives companies something that never existed at scale in Europe. A way to confirm the origin. A way to audit real-world movement. A way to verify return into the value chain with scientific certainty.

    CARTIF then turns that capability into performance. With SMX embedded across its pilot plants and applied research programs, Spain gains a real-time measurement loop that links innovation to documented results. Data that once took years to gather through surveys and audits now appears instantly through verified material activity. Companies can qualify for grants faster. They can meet compliance targets faster. They can validate R&D faster. Evidence becomes a growth strategy.

    Innovation That Speeds Up the Economy Instead of Slowing It

    The pace of verification is the real breakthrough here. For decades, businesses treated sustainability as something that consumed time and margin. Now the opposite is true. Once a material carries a verifiable passport, its journey becomes a bankable metric. Lenders can underwrite it. Regulators can trust it. Markets can reward it.

    SMX and CARTIF effectively connect environmental behavior to financial upside, turning transparency into a competitive lever instead of an operational burden. A circular economy with credible measurement does not drain resources. It compounds them.

    Spain stands on the shoulders of global proof. SMX demonstrated this model at the national scale in Singapore through its work with A*STAR. That initiative tracked waste streams, verified recycled content, and established a tradable digital framework for circular materials. The success of that effort created a blueprint that now connects Asia and Europe through a shared layer of traceable, measurable sustainability.

    Proof That Scales Beyond Borders

    The system demonstrated in Singapore and Valladolid is not local. It is universal. A molecular signature embedded in Spanish packaging can function the same way inside an Italian food processor, a German automotive plant, or a French construction project. Verification travels without friction.

    Every new material added to the network strengthens its resonance. The result is a distributed web of authenticated activity that gradually reshapes how Europe measures industrial performance.

    CARTIF plays a central role in this expansion. Its sustainability programs span packaging, renewables, mobility systems, construction materials, and critical resources. With SMX feeding verified data into those programs, Spain becomes a proving environment that links research, industry, and public policy into one loop of measurable progress.

    Deputy General Manager Sergio Sanz has been clear. The technology delivers exactly what companies need to prove their claims, refine their processes, and demonstrate circular performance with scientific precision. That alignment is what transforms proof into actionable value.

    Europe’s New Industrial Playbook Begins in Spain

    Spain is not just deploying technology. It is defining a new framework for European industry. One where innovation is tied to measurement, and measurement is tied to growth. Academics, startups, manufacturers, and local governments now operate with a shared layer of data they can all trust.

    This creates a coordinated marketplace of evidence. It removes uncertainty. It creates incentives for verification instead of incentives for vague declarations.

    Circularity only becomes meaningful when it is measurable. It is not enough to say a product was recycled or reused. The world needs confirmation that the cycle occurred. SMX supplies the identity. CARTIF supplies the scale. Together, they convert the circular economy from promise to proof and from proof to economic performance.

    This moment marks the beginning of Europe’s next industrial chapter. A shift toward regenerative growth powered by verifiable action. Each traced material adds measurable worth. Each verified transaction acts as an economic weight. Each validated process tightens the loop of material efficiency across the continent.

    Circularity in Europe is no longer just a concept. Thanks to the partnership between SMX and CARTIF, it is becoming functional, profitable, and real.

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This editorial contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These forward looking statements reflect expectations and assumptions regarding future events involving SMX (NASDAQ: SMX), its collaborative initiatives with CARTIF, its molecular tracing technologies, and the development and expansion of verified circularity programs in Spain, the European Union, and other global regions. Forward looking statements are not historical facts. They are based on current beliefs, estimates, and assumptions that are subject to risks, uncertainties, and variables that are difficult to predict.

    Forward looking statements in this editorial include, without limitation, expectations concerning the continued integration and performance of SMX’s molecular physical-to-digital technology; anticipated commercial deployment across industrial sectors in Castilla y León and Europe; the potential scalability of SMX’s material-level verification systems into research programs, supply chains, and pilot plants operated by CARTIF; and the projected ability of these systems to enhance grant qualification, regulatory compliance, material recovery, and sustainability-linked financing. These statements also include expectations regarding advancements in Spain’s circular economy infrastructure; the potential for SMX and CARTIF to create new economic efficiencies through verified material flows; anticipated alignment with European Union regulatory frameworks, including the Digital Product Passport, sustainability reporting standards, and ESG-linked financing mechanisms; and the potential for global replication of systems demonstrated in Singapore and Europe.

    Additional forward looking statements relate to broader market and industry conditions, including the belief that verifiable traceability may increase brand value, reduce compliance costs, accelerate adoption of circular supply chains, and unlock new revenue opportunities tied to authenticated material movements. Assumptions concerning future demand for verifiable recycled content, the maturation of circular economies across global markets, and the potential for SMX technologies to enable transparent material ecosystems also fall within the scope of these statements.

    These forward looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause actual outcomes to differ materially from those expressed or implied. Factors that may impact results include, but are not limited to: changes in European Union regulatory requirements; shifts in consumer, corporate, or governmental sustainability priorities; macroeconomic conditions; geopolitical developments; supply chain disruptions; competitive technological advancements; scientific or technical challenges in large-scale deployment of molecular markers; operational risks in pilot or commercial settings; and other factors described in SMX’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q.

    Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward looking statements. These statements speak only as of the date of publication. SMX undertakes no obligation to update or revise forward looking statements to reflect subsequent events, changes in circumstances, or new information, except as required by applicable law.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • SMX Connects the World’s Supply Chains Into a Single Network of Truth as Media Spotlight Intensifies

    SMX Connects the World’s Supply Chains Into a Single Network of Truth as Media Spotlight Intensifies

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 14, 2025 / For decades, global supply chains have operated like disconnected islands. Each country, each industry, each regulatory body ran its own version of oversight. Data lived in silos. Transparency came from paperwork. And risk was absorbed as a cost of doing business.

    A new architecture is emerging, and SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is wiring the world into what can only be described as a verification supergrid. Its molecular marking system, already deployed across plastics, textiles, metals, and trade goods, is bridging continents and industries with one unifying feature: proof at the material level. The world is starting to notice.

    When Rolling Stone highlighted that the era of slogans is collapsing under its own weight, the message was not about culture. It was about supply chains. Proof, not positioning, is becoming the benchmark. Weeks later, USA Today outlined how traceability technologies are reshaping border inspections and tariff policy by turning raw materials into self-identifying assets. Morning Honey added a lifestyle lens to the same trend, noting how brands can finally confirm what they have been claiming for years.

    And in an extensive conversation with OPIS, SMX revealed how this system is already operating across Asia-Pacific, tagging recycled plastics at the molecular level and preparing for a future where every kilo of resin has a secure, auditable identity.

    The media is not echoing hype. They are documenting a shift.

    A System Designed to Replace Guesswork With Autonomous Truth

    Carbon markets taught the world a hard lesson. Good intentions are not the same as measurable outcomes. Credits depended on extrapolation, modeling, and unverifiable reporting. As loopholes expanded, confidence shrank.

    SMX is not fixing carbon markets. It is solving the underlying problem: the absence of objective material-level truth.

    In the OPIS recap of Singapore’s strategy, SMX’s pilot with A*STAR clearly lays out the stakes. Nation-scale recycling programs can only scale when proof is native to the material. Singapore is pursuing measurable increases in recycling rates and sharp reductions in incineration because it is building its system on certified material identity rather than on administrative trust.

    That is the quiet brilliance of SMX’s model. Instead of certifying the process, it certifies the material.
    Instead of hoping compliance occurs, it verifies that it did. And, instead of rewarding claims, it rewards confirmation.

    This is how supply chains evolve from narratives to networks.

    Where Verification Becomes Leverage

    What makes the supergrid concept powerful is how it intersects with economics. In a global marketplace, identity creates advantage. Verified plastics clear customs faster. Verified textiles qualify for sustainability-linked financing. Verified metals bypass origin disputes that often trigger tariffs.

    Morning Honey underscored how SMX’s markers enable customs authorities to scan goods in seconds, reducing mislabeling, fraud, and accelerating clearance for companies that operate cleanly. It is transparency as propulsion, not punishment.

    And SMX’s reach is widening.

    In the United States, its collaboration with Tradepro will turn verified rPET into a premium-grade commodity. In Spain, CARTIF is testing SMX technology in real industrial environments to help Europe meet its circular-economy benchmarks. In France, CETI is embedding molecular identity into textiles, enabling fashion and luxury houses to authenticate fibers and blends immediately.

    In Singapore, Goldstrom is adopting SMX’s technology for precious metals, giving gold and silver a permanent origin signature that persists from mine to mint to retail. And in Austria, REDWAVE is integrating SMX into automated sorting systems so factories can verify materials as they move along the belt.

    Each node strengthens the larger network. Each adoption raises the global standard. And, each integration expands the surface area of truth.

    Proof as the New Global Language

    At a certain point, momentum becomes infrastructure. The acceleration of coverage from sources as varied as Rolling Stone, USA Today, consumer outlets, and commodity analysts is no coincidence. It is convergence. Different sectors are discovering the same solution from different angles.

    SMX’s platform gives plastics, textiles, metals, and electronics a persistent identity that does not wash off, wear out, or disappear under pressure. Paired with the Plastic Cycle Token, recycled content can be defined, valued, and traded across borders with the precision of a financial instrument.

    Audits without accuracy and pledges without proof have tested the world’s patience. SMX answers with something solid: a foundation supply chains can trust. The difference between intent and impact has always been the weak point. SMX is strengthening it.

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This information contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Forward looking statements reflect current expectations, projections, and assumptions regarding future events that involve risks and uncertainties. These statements relate to SMX (NASDAQ: SMX), its molecular marker systems, its partnerships, its expansion into new sectors and geographies, and its technology’s potential role in transforming global supply chains, recycling markets, and material authentication frameworks.

    Forward looking statements in this editorial include, but are not limited to, expectations concerning the adoption, scalability, and commercial deployment of SMX technologies across plastics, textiles, metals, electronics, and other materials; the potential impact of SMX’s systems on regulatory compliance, tariff enforcement, sustainability reporting, and cross-border trade; anticipated performance of SMX initiatives in the United States, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific region; expectations regarding the effectiveness and continued development of SMX-integrated identity layers, automated sorting systems, textile authentication, and precious-metals traceability; and the potential economic or market benefits associated with digital verification instruments such as the Plastic Cycle Token.

    These statements also reflect assumptions about regulatory developments, market demand for authenticated recycled content, corporate adoption of traceability technologies, global sustainability mandates, geopolitical influences on trade, technological performance under commercial conditions, and the ability of SMX to integrate its systems into diverse industrial workflows. Forward looking statements are subject to significant risks and uncertainties that could cause actual outcomes to differ materially. These risks include, but are not limited to, changes in environmental or trade regulations; shifts in consumer or corporate behavior; competitive pressures from alternative traceability systems; scientific or technical challenges in molecular-level deployment; operational disruptions within SMX or its partners; macroeconomic volatility; supply chain changes; and conditions described in SMX’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and any subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q.

    Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward looking statements. These statements speak only as of the date of publication. SMX undertakes no obligation to update or revise forward looking statements to reflect future events, changes in circumstances, or newly available information, except as required by applicable law.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • SMX Brings Identity to American Plastics as FDA-Compliant Molecular Marking Turns rPET Into a Certified Commodity

    SMX Brings Identity to American Plastics as FDA-Compliant Molecular Marking Turns rPET Into a Certified Commodity

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 14, 2025 / For decades, plastics have moved through the world without an identity. They were manufactured, used, discarded, shredded, melted, and remade, but the material never carried a history. Once waste entered the recycling stream, its past vanished. And without origin, plastics could not carry value.

    SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is changing that paradigm by bringing identity to the material itself. In a new U.S. partnership with a respected Miami-based plastics distributor, Tradepro, the company is embedding its FDA-compliant molecular markers directly into recycled PET resin. The marker adheres to 21 CFR standards for Food Contact Substances, making it viable for one of the most highly regulated categories in the entire materials landscape.

    In simple terms, SMX is giving rPET something it has never had before: a persistent, verifiable identity that survives every melt and remanufacturing cycle. Food-grade packaging made from recycled content can now prove that it is legitimate, compliant, and authentic, not because a supplier claims so, but because the material itself carries the proof.

    This shifts recycled plastic from a commodity defined by risk to a material defined by credibility.

    The U.S. Becomes a Launchpad for Identity-Driven Recycling
    The partnership marks SMX’s first major foothold in the American plastics ecosystem, but it is part of a larger global plan. Across Southeast Asia, SMX has already embedded markers during extrusion, ensuring traceability at the moment plastic takes shape. In Europe, the company demonstrated that even the most challenging polymers, including flame-retardant and carbon-black plastics, can be identified through molecular reading.

    Together, these programs map out a universal identity layer for recycled plastics. Geography no longer dictates credibility. Application no longer dictates limitations. If a material carries an SMX identity, its origin and lifecycle can be confirmed anywhere, at any time, by anyone with the appropriate reader.

    This is the first step toward a world where recycled plastics are treated as certified commodities rather than discounted substitutes.

    Identity Converts Waste Into a Financial Product
    For recycled plastics, the missing piece has never been supply. It has been trust. Governments are imposing quotas. Global brands are pledging recycled content. But without a mechanism to verify the material itself, these targets have been impossible to meet at scale.

    SMX closes that trust gap. Once a molecular marker is added, every batch of recycled resin becomes a traceable asset. Its movements can be logged. Its integrity can be affirmed. Its recycled content can be priced accurately.

    And when tied to digital instruments such as SMX’s Plastic Cycle Token, rPET transforms from a downstream cost into an upstream financial product. Recycled content becomes measurable. Measurable content becomes tradeable. And, tradeable content becomes investable.

    This redefines the economics of recycling. Proof no longer lives in paperwork. Proof becomes intrinsic to the material itself, creating a pathway for rPET to compete directly with virgin resin in the highest-value markets.

    Food-Grade rPET Becomes the Turning Point
    The ability to operate in compliance with FDA regulations is a watershed moment for the entire industry. Food-grade packaging has historically been the most difficult category for recycled content to enter. It requires consistent quality, stable chemistry, and absolute confidence that the material is safe.

    By passing FDA-related compliance thresholds through molecular marking, SMX shows that recycled plastics do not need to live in low-margin, low-performance tiers. They can move into premium applications where oversight is strict, margins are higher, and credibility is everything.

    In this context, rPET is no longer a second-class material. It becomes a certified input with a documented history and a verifiable identity.

    The opportunity is enormous. The global plastics market sits above $800 billion. The recycling segment alone is valued at around $50 billion, yet it is underdeveloped due to verification bottlenecks. SMX’s technology helps clear that bottleneck by turning recyclate into a fully traceable asset that can be monetized, certified, and standardized.

    So, no, this isn’t a recycling story. It is an identity story. And it signals the beginning of a materials economy where every product can carry its own truth.

    About SMX
    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements
    This information contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These statements are based on current expectations, estimates, forecasts, and assumptions regarding future events involving SMX (NASDAQ:SMX), its technologies, its partnership activities, and its development of molecular marking systems for recycled PET and other materials. Forward looking statements are not historical facts. They involve risks, uncertainties, and factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied.

    Forward looking statements in this editorial include, but are not limited to, expectations regarding the integration of SMX’s molecular markers into U.S. recycling markets; the potential for FDA-compliant markers to enable recycled PET to enter food-grade and other regulated applications; the scalability of SMX solutions across diverse global supply chains; anticipated adoption of identity-based verification systems by manufacturers, recyclers, regulators, or brand owners; the potential economic impact of turning recycled plastics into tradeable or monetizable assets; the expected performance of SMX’s Plastic Cycle Token or other digital verification instruments; and the belief that molecular-level authentication may influence pricing, compliance, sustainability reporting, or financial strategies used within the plastics sector.

    These forward looking statements are also subject to assumptions regarding regulatory developments; market demand for authenticated recycled content; the pace of corporate adoption of traceability technology; global economic conditions; supply chain constraints; evolving environmental policies; and general industry behavior relating to sustainability commitments and recycling mandates. Risks include, but are not limited to, changes in FDA or international regulatory standards; technological challenges in large-scale deployment of molecular markers; competitive innovations from other companies; operational disruptions in recycling or plastics manufacturing; fluctuations in pricing for virgin or recycled plastics; and the broader economic conditions that influence capital investment and industrial activity.

    Detailed risk factors are described in SMX’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Annual Report on Form 10-K and subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward looking statements. These statements speak only as of the date of publication. SMX undertakes no obligation to update or revise forward looking statements to reflect subsequent events, changes in circumstances, or new information, except as required by applicable law.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • SMX Is Building the “Internet of Materials” And the World Is Logging In

    SMX Is Building the “Internet of Materials” And the World Is Logging In

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 13, 2025 / There is a point in every technological shift when the idea stops sounding bold and starts sounding obvious. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) just crossed that line. For years, the company worked quietly at the molecular level, embedding memory, identity, and traceability into the world’s raw materials. Now those materials are waking up. The next internet is not digital. It is molecular. SMX is building its backbone, and the world is finally connecting.

    The attempts that came before were only surface-level. Barcodes, QR codes, spreadsheets, recycling pledges, and sustainability reports. None of them ever touched the material itself, which meant none of them could be trusted. SMX changed that by teaching matter how to store information the way servers store code. The result is the first real Internet of Materials, a global network where every physical object can identify itself, verify its history, and interact with the systems around it.

    The shift from idea to infrastructure is happening through SMX’s partnerships. Each one brings an entire sector online and gives this new network a shape that the world can start to see.

    Singapore Connects a Nation

    The story begins where the digital world usually begins. Policy. Singapore’s collaboration with SMX and A*STAR is not a testbed. It is a national platform built to give every piece of plastic a digital identity. When a country known for setting global standards decides that molecular traceability belongs inside its public infrastructure, it signals a turning point. Verification is becoming as fundamental as data storage, power, and connectivity.

    This is the first phase of a genuine material internet. A country uploads its plastics economy and sets a template for everyone else. As other nations in Southeast Asia begin to follow, Singapore ceases to be a regional leader and becomes the origin point. SMX is writing the source code.

    Recycling Joins the Network

    In industry, SMX’s partnership with REDWAVE is the connection that brings recycling online. REDWAVE’s sorters can now read SMX’s molecular signatures in real time. What used to be a guessing game becomes machine-readable truth. Every flake of plastic becomes a data point. Every bale becomes a verified record. Every shipment becomes a transparent transaction.

    Tradepro, a Miami plastics and resin dealer, closes the loop by pushing these authenticated materials back into U.S. supply chains where brands are under pressure to raise recycled content levels. This is where the Internet of Materials becomes a marketplace. Proof becomes margin. Waste becomes inventory. Verification becomes tradeable value.

    Europe Logs On

    Across the Atlantic, SMX’s partnership with CARTIF provides Europe with a gateway to the next generation of regulatory compliance. CARTIF’s facilities allow SMX to integrate molecular traceability directly into manufacturing lines, recycling plants, and material testing programs. This is Europe’s access point to the network. As the EU tightens circular-economy rules, industries need real-time verification to comply. SMX provides the capability, and CARTIF accelerates its adoption.

    This is not validation from a distance. It is integration into a region that shapes environmental policy for much of the world. Once SMX’s system is woven into European operations, the rest of the continent follows.

    Metals Become Digital Assets

    Goldstrom pulls the Internet of Materials into one of humanity’s oldest storehouses of value. Precious metals have always depended on trust. Stamps, engravings, paper records. All of it can be forged. SMX embeds a molecular identity that cannot be removed or rewritten. Gold becomes more than a commodity. It becomes a digital asset with lineage, memory, and certainty.

    This transforms how refiners price recycled metal. It changes how inventories are audited. It gives institutional buyers a new way to quantify risk. In the Internet of Materials, even gold has a login credential.

    Textiles Enter the Network

    CETI brings textiles into the system. Fashion is heavy on sustainability promises but light on proof. SMX’s markers enter the fiber stage, where they become inseparable from the fabric itself. Brands can verify content, sourcing, and durability without relying on marketing language. Investors see transparency. Regulators see compliance. Consumers see truth. Once textiles carry memory, they stop being disposable. They become certifiable. CETI and SMX are turning the fashion world into a verified supply ecosystem.

    The Network Becomes Unstoppable

    What SMX is building does not expand in a line. It expands like a network, one connection at a time, until the structure becomes impossible to overlook. Singapore forms the national layer and proves that verification can function as public infrastructure. REDWAVE and Tradepro activate the industrial layer by turning recycling plants into authentication hubs. CARTIF builds the regulatory layer across Europe where traceability becomes the foundation of compliance. Goldstrom adds the financial layer by giving metals identities that cannot be disputed. CETI completes the consumer layer by weaving memory into everyday materials.

    Once these layers connect, the network gains its own momentum. It stops depending on any one region or sector and spreads because the logic of verification is stronger than the inertia of the old system. Proof shifts from optional to expected. The Internet of Materials shifts from concept to standard.

    SMX spent years creating the molecular language that makes this world possible. Now the world is learning to speak it. The Internet of Materials is no longer an idea. It is infrastructure. It is forming in real time and, for the first time in history, every material can participate in the economy with a verified identity.

    SMX did not just create a product. It created a network. The world is finally logging in.

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This editorial contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include statements that are not historical facts and reflect current expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions, or strategies regarding future events. Words such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “contemplate,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “intend,” “may,” “might,” “plan,” “possible,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “will,” “would,” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying terms.

    Forward-looking statements in this editorial include, for example, statements regarding SMX’s partnership activities in Singapore, Europe, and the United States, the development and expansion of its molecular marking technology, the potential creation and growth of an Internet of Materials, expected benefits from collaborations with A*STAR, REDWAVE, Tradepro, CARTIF, Goldstrom, and CETI, the potential for national and industrial-scale implementation of SMX systems, the anticipated role of molecular traceability in global supply chains, and expectations relating to SMX’s future products, services, growth strategy, commercial adoption, and technology roadmap.

    These forward-looking statements are based on information available as of the date of publication and reflect current expectations, forecasts, assumptions, and judgments. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks, uncertainties, and factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied.

    Factors that may cause actual results to differ include changes in applicable laws or regulations, the ability of SMX and its partners to successfully develop, deploy, and commercialize molecular verification technologies, the timing and success of integration into manufacturing and recycling systems, market acceptance of SMX’s solutions, industry adoption rates for traceability and digital passport systems, the ability to protect and enforce intellectual property rights, the availability of financing to support future growth, competitive pressures within the verification and materials technology sectors, and economic or supply chain disruptions that could impact the industries SMX serves.

    Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date they are made. SMX undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this editorial except as required by applicable securities laws.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • The Cold War Has Gone Industrial; SMX Is Fortifying The Battle Lines

    The Cold War Has Gone Industrial; SMX Is Fortifying The Battle Lines

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 12, 2025 / The Cold War never really ended. It just changed shape. What once played out in missile silos and diplomatic cables now unfolds in supply chains, trade networks, and industrial policies. The new battlefield is not ideological or territorial. It’s economic, technological, and invisible. And the weapon every side is fighting to control is: proof.

    From critical minerals to recycled plastics, from luxury goods to defense components, the world is engaged in a silent struggle over authenticity. Nations throw tariffs like grenades, corporations build redundant supply lines as fortresses, and regulators issue sustainability decrees like cease-fires. Yet under all that noise, one truth remains unchanged: no one can genuinely verify where materials come from or how they move through the system.

    That gap has become the world’s soft target. It fuels counterfeiting, corruption, waste, and inefficiency. It’s the hidden tax on progress that costs trillions each year. SMX (NASDAQ: SMX) exists to eliminate that tax.

    SMX Offers a Universal Non-Lethal Arsenal

    SMX has built a molecular-marking system that embeds traceable, inert chemical identifiers directly into raw materials. Those identifiers, invisible to the naked eye but scannable by proprietary optical sensors, give matter its own memory. Every product, mineral, or polymer becomes self-verifying, carrying a record of its journey from creation to consumption.

    It’s not blockchain. It’s not paperwork. It’s chemistry that can prove itself, the foundation of the proof economy. And that changes everything.

    When molecules hold memory, global trade transforms. Material efficiency is no longer a theory; it’s a measurable outcome. Waste decreases because diversion becomes detectable. Fraud collapses because substitution leaves a chemical fingerprint. Sustainability moves from claim to confirmation.

    The Industrial Cold War’s Front Lines

    The world’s new Industrial Cold War isn’t about who makes what, but about who can prove it. Proof has become the new power, and SMX’s technology delivers it. Imagine gold that can prove it wasn’t mined in conflict zones, textiles that verify their recycled fibers, or recycled plastics that confirm every molecule of recovery. SMX is creating a world where authenticity is embedded, not declared.

    That system is already spreading across continents. In Japan, SMX’s partnership with Sumitomo Corporation enables molecular traceability for metals, minerals, and energy networks, aligning supply-chain transparency with national security priorities. In Singapore, the company is developing a national plastics-passport platform with A*STAR, connecting recyclers, producers, and regulators through a unified data infrastructure for the circular economy.

    In Europe, SMX controls the TrueGold Consortium and partners with Goldstrom, a global metals group operating in New York, Singapore, and the UAE, to authenticate precious metals from mine to market. It works with CETI in France to embed molecular memory into textiles, enabling certified recycling in line with Europe’s evolving sustainability mandates. In Spain, SMX collaborates with the CARTIF Technology Centre in Valladolid, applying its molecular marker technology across multiple industrial fronts, from construction materials and packaging to energy and circular manufacturing, all reinforcing Europe’s move toward verifiable, data-backed sustainability.

    Additional front lines are also forming. In Austria, collaborations with BT-Systems and REDWAVE integrate molecular verification and artificial intelligence into automated recycling facilities. In Singapore, SMX partners with Bio-Packaging to certify recycled plastics for major consumer brands. In the United States, its collaboration with Tradepro Group brings the same level of molecular verification to domestic recycling networks. Each alliance strengthens the same global campaign to replace faith with evidence. Each alliance strengthens the same global campaign to replace faith with proof.

    But SMX isn’t about proof as a gesture of goodwill toward sustainability. It’s about transforming proof into the foundation of global commerce: a measurable, verifiable layer that holds every material, transaction, and claim accountable.

    Proof Becomes a Currency

    As SMX’s network expands, proof itself begins to take on financial value. The company’s Plastic Cycle Token is a tangible expression of that principle, assigning measurable economic worth to verified recycling. It converts circularity into a tradable asset, rewarding compliance and transparency in ways that programs like carbon credits never achieved. The larger vision is clear: when transparency becomes currency, material efficiency becomes a global market driver.

    Meanwhile, the fragility and dangers within the old system are still on display. At Utah’s White Mesa Mill, rare earths are refined in enormous acid tanks to supply clean-energy industries, networking, and national defense. Yet even there, among America’s most strategic assets, traceability gaps persist. The metals powering the modern world can still disappear into gray-market channels before regulators ever see them. Every unverified material is a potential point of failure.

    Proof, then, is not just about sustainability or governance. It’s about sovereignty. Governments can spend billions on reshoring production, and banks like JPMorgan can pledge billions more to rebuild critical mineral supply chains. Still, none of it secures the system if the materials themselves cannot prove their truth.

    Molecular Proof Speaks a Universal Language

    That’s the problem SMX solves. Its molecular-marking technology makes matter accountable, creating a universal language of trust that transcends borders, politics, and policy. It is both a deterrent and an equalizer; a way to restore fairness and confidence to a global economy built on doubt.

    The new Cold War is no longer about territory; it’s about industry. It’s about everything else: trade, materials, technology, and truth. The nations and companies that master proof will control not just markets but meaning. SMX has already built the system that makes that possible.

    Proof isn’t patriotic. Proof isn’t optional. Proof is survival. And SMX has the arsenal that turns chemistry into certainty in a world where every industry has become a battlefield.

    Sources and references:

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements
    This release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws regarding SMX (Security Matters) plc (NASDAQ: SMX) and its technology initiatives, including statements concerning its molecular-marking system, partnerships, and the expansion of its verification ecosystem across global supply chains. Forward-looking statements are not historical facts and are generally identified by words such as “believe,” “anticipate,” “expect,” “intend,” “plan,” “estimate,” “project,” “may,” “should,” “could,” “will,” “potential,” “target,” “continue,” and similar expressions.

    These statements include, but are not limited to, expectations regarding SMX’s ability to scale its molecular-marking technology across multiple industries, including metals, minerals, plastics, textiles, and defense components; the commercial and strategic outcomes of its collaborations with Sumitomo Corporation, A*STAR, Goldstrom, CETI, CARTIF, BT-Systems, REDWAVE, Bio-Packaging, and Tradepro Group; the future development, adoption, and market acceptance of the Plastic Cycle Token as a verifiable circular-economy instrument; and SMX’s role in enabling transparent, traceable, and verifiable material flows that align with national and corporate sustainability and security priorities.

    These forward-looking statements reflect SMX’s current expectations and are based on information available as of the date of this release, as well as management’s current forecasts, assumptions, and estimates, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those projected due to factors including but not limited to: global economic and geopolitical instability; regulatory changes impacting supply-chain transparency or digital-verification frameworks; SMX’s ability to execute partnerships and commercialization strategies effectively; fluctuations in commodity or energy markets; and other risks described in the company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. SMX undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date they are made, except as required by law.

    EMAIL Contact: info@securitymatterltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • SMX’s Global Web of Partnerships Turns Gold Transparent, Fashion Traceable, and Technology Accountable

    SMX’s Global Web of Partnerships Turns Gold Transparent, Fashion Traceable, and Technology Accountable

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 11, 2025 / There comes a point in every company’s journey when innovation stops being an idea and becomes infrastructure. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) has reached that point. The company that once taught matter to remember is now teaching industries to verify. This isn’t about what could happen anymore-it’s about what must. Proof has shifted from an optional add-on to the structural backbone of modern commerce, connecting continents and supply chains from Asia to Europe to the United States.

    For years, SMX perfected its technology in the background-molecular markers that live within materials, digital passports that follow them across every stage of production, use, and reuse. What once sounded like science fiction has turned into industrial necessity. With global regulations tightening and markets demanding traceable accountability, SMX’s expanding ecosystem of partners shows how verification has become the new foundation of global value creation.

    Turning Verification Into Policy

    Singapore sits at the top of that evolution. In partnership with A*STAR, SMX is helping to create a national plastics passport system that assigns a permanent identity to materials from manufacture to reuse. This isn’t a concept or a pilot. It’s a functioning, government-backed standard that establishes digital continuity for every unit of plastic across its lifecycle.

    For Singapore, it’s a statement about national efficiency and compliance. For SMX, it’s a validation of molecular verification at policy level. When a country known for precision engineering and regulatory rigor adopts your system, it elevates the conversation worldwide. What began as a scientific pursuit has turned into legislation in motion, and the rest of Asia is watching.

    Machines Into Proof Engines

    The industrial shift is already visible. SMX’s collaboration with REDWAVE and Tradepro is redefining how recycling operates. REDWAVE’s high-speed sorting systems are being trained to detect SMX’s molecular tags, verifying materials in real time as they move through production lines.

    That kind of instant authentication eliminates the need for manual audits and late-stage paperwork. It transforms uncertainty into measurable data, improving margins and reliability across the supply chain. Tradepro completes the picture by distributing verified rPET into U.S. markets, supplying major brands that now face strict recycled-content mandates.

    Together, these partners are proving that waste streams can become data streams and that the value of a material increases when its story can be verified from origin to reuse.

    Spain Becomes Europe’s Proof Accelerator

    In Spain, SMX has partnered with CARTIF to integrate molecular tracking and analytics into next-generation circular-economy projects. CARTIF’s testing centers act as launchpads for new technologies before they scale across the European Union, allowing SMX to demonstrate its system under real-world industrial conditions.

    The alignment is perfectly timed. Europe’s sustainability rules are becoming more exacting, and traceability is now a requirement for market participation. By working inside CARTIF’s ecosystem, SMX gains faster routes to implementation across manufacturing and municipal networks. This partnership converts European climate policy into measurable business opportunity and positions SMX at the intersection of compliance and commerce.

    Precious Metals Learn to Speak

    Gold and silver have symbolized trust for centuries, yet their authentication systems remain centuries old. Through trueGold and its collaboration with Goldstrom, SMX is embedding molecular proof directly into bullion. Each bar, coin, or refined lot carries a unique chemical signature that cannot be lost or replicated, creating an incorruptible record of origin and recycling history.

    For traders and refiners, this changes the economics of trust. Verified metals can move faster, carry lower insurance costs, and command higher premiums because risk is reduced. In markets that measure value by confidence, molecular proof is becoming the new hallmark.

    Textiles Add Accountability

    Fashion’s sustainability challenge has always been verification. Through its work with CETI in France, SMX is embedding its technology into textile production lines so fibers and fabrics can carry their own digital passports. CETI’s facilities provide the scale and engineering discipline needed to take SMX’s laboratory precision into everyday manufacturing.

    Brands can now prove where materials come from, how much recycled content they contain, and how they perform over time. Regulators gain transparent data. Consumers gain confidence. And investors gain measurable metrics that align with sustainability-linked financing. In this model, transparency is not a marketing slogan. It’s part of the product itself.

    A Network That Defines the Category

    Each SMX partnership anchors a pillar of the global proof economy. Goldstrom brings transparency to the oldest asset class on Earth, giving gold and silver a verifiable memory from mine to vault. CETI extends that same precision into the fashion supply chain, proving that sustainability can be stitched into fabric rather than written into policy. Tradepro turns waste into verified resource, converting recycled plastics into certified materials that industries can trust.

    In REDWAVE’s sorting systems, SMX’s molecular markers meet real-world throughput – the technology that separates claims from reality at industrial scale. CARTIF gives Europe its proving ground for traceable circularity, transforming regulation into measurable accountability. And with A*STAR, Singapore’s national science agency, SMX is setting a country-level precedent for digital material passports and Plastic Cycle Token infrastructure that could redefine how nations track sustainability.

    Together, these partnerships form the connective tissue of a new industrial framework – one where verification travels through every sector and across every border. SMX isn’t waiting for regulation to force change; it’s architecting the system that makes it possible.

    Proof has become the universal language of trade, and SMX is writing its grammar. What began as molecular research has matured into a platform for global trust, from the mine shaft to the runway to the microchip. In that world, value is no longer just extracted or exchanged. It’s verified – and verification, at last, outlasts promise.

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    The information in this press release includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions or strategies regarding the future. In addition, any statements that refer to projections, forecasts or other characterizations of future events or circumstances, including any underlying assumptions, are forward-looking statements. The words “anticipate,” “believe,” “contemplate,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “intends,” “may,” “will,” “might,” “plan,” “possible,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “would” and similar expressions may identify forward-looking statements, but the absence of these words does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. Forward-looking statements in this press release may include, for example: matters relating to the Company’s fight against abusive and possibly illegal trading tactics against the Company’s stock; successful launch and implementation of SMX’s joint projects with manufacturers and other supply chain participants of gold, steel, rubber and other materials; changes in SMX’s strategy, future operations, financial position, estimated revenues and losses, projected costs, prospects and plans; SMX’s ability to develop and launch new products and services, including its planned Plastic Cycle Token; SMX’s ability to successfully and efficiently integrate future expansion plans and opportunities; SMX’s ability to grow its business in a cost-effective manner; SMX’s product development timeline and estimated research and development costs; the implementation, market acceptance and success of SMX’s business model; developments and projections relating to SMX’s competitors and industry; and SMX’s approach and goals with respect to technology. These forward-looking statements are based on information available as of the date of this press release, and current expectations, forecasts and assumptions, and involve a number of judgments, risks and uncertainties. Accordingly, forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing views as of any subsequent date, and no obligation is undertaken to update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date they were made, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required under applicable securities laws. As a result of a number of known and unknown risks and uncertainties, actual results or performance may be materially different from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. Some factors that could cause actual results to differ include: the ability to maintain the listing of the Company’s shares on Nasdaq; changes in applicable laws or regulations; any lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on SMX’s business; the ability to implement business plans, forecasts, and other expectations, and identify and realize additional opportunities; the risk of downturns and the possibility of rapid change in the highly competitive industry in which SMX operates; the risk that SMX and its current and future collaborators are unable to successfully develop and commercialize SMX’s products or services, or experience significant delays in doing so; the risk that the Company may never achieve or sustain profitability; the risk that the Company will need to raise additional capital to execute its business plan, which may not be available on acceptable terms or at all; the risk that the Company experiences difficulties in managing its growth and expanding operations; the risk that third-party suppliers and manufacturers are not able to fully and timely meet their obligations; the risk that SMX is unable to secure or protect its intellectual property; the possibility that SMX may be adversely affected by other economic, business, and/or competitive factors; and other risks and uncertainties described in SMX’s filings from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • SMX’s Newest Partnership Puts Humanity Back Into Gold

    SMX’s Newest Partnership Puts Humanity Back Into Gold

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 11, 2025 / For centuries, gold has represented permanence, beauty, and wealth. It has been worn as power, traded as currency, and hoarded as security. But for all its brilliance, the truth about where it comes from has always been a matter of faith.

    That era is over. trueGold, a majority-owned subsidiary of SMX (NASDAQ:SMX), is giving gold something it has never had before: proof. The company’s molecular-marking technology allows each gram of gold to hold a chemical memory of its origin, purity, and ethical path from mine to market.

    This is not paperwork. It’s science. The proof is literally inside the metal. That means the gold in a wedding ring, a luxury timepiece, or a national reserve can finally verify its own story. It’s the convergence of transparency, technology, and humanity, and it may be one of the most important shifts in the global value chain this century.

    A Technology Rooted in Responsibility

    The marker that powers SMX’s trueGold is molecular, invisible, and permanent. Once embedded, it can be read in seconds without cutting, melting, or dismantling the gold. What once required weeks of testing to determine provenance, now takes moments. And it comes with scientific certainty. SMX’s system instantly verifies authenticity, recycled content, and ethical sourcing, transforming gold into what it was always meant to be: a universal standard of trust.

    The implications go beyond the lab. In regions where illicit mining funds conflict or force child labor, molecular verification becomes a line of defense. It creates a system where only verified gold enters legitimate markets. Accountability begins at the atomic level, cutting off exploitation at its source and forcing the industry to evolve toward fairness.

    Independent testing by Intertek confirmed that SMX’s marker is chemically inert and non-toxic. It meets international safety standards, including EU REACH and RoHS compliance, the U.S. National Stamping Act, and Canada’s Precious Metals Marking Regulations. That means gold can now carry proof without altering its purity or its value. Traceability and consumer safety finally share the same space.

    Partnerships That Humanize Proof

    Proof, on its own, is just data. What gives it meaning are the people and systems that uphold it. SMX’s trueGold network is designed to make transparency practical, enforceable, and human.

    Its partnership with Ava Global, a leader in high-value logistics, ensures that verification continues during every shipment. Marked gold maintains its verified identity from refinery to vault. Fingo, another collaborator specializing in digital identity, verifies that only authorized personnel handle the gold, securing the human side of the chain.

    Together, they turn the old process of “trust by declaration” into “trust by detection.” Every checkpoint becomes part of the proof itself. The result is a living ecosystem of accountability that safeguards both the product and the people connected to it.

    The Global Network of Material Truth

    The reach of SMX extends far beyond precious metals. In Europe, the company collaborates with the CARTIF Technology Centre in Spain and CETI in France. These partnerships apply molecular memory to textiles, packaging, and industrial materials, advancing Europe’s move toward measurable sustainability.

    In Austria, SMX works with BT-Systems and REDWAVE, integrating molecular verification and artificial intelligence into automated recycling facilities. In Singapore, its partnership with Bio-Packaging is certifying recycled plastics for major consumer brands, while Tradepro Group in the United States brings the same technology into domestic recycling networks.

    Each alliance forms another front in the global campaign to replace faith with evidence. Together, they reinforce the idea that proof is not limited to one material or one country. It is a universal language of accountability that can span industries, borders, and ideologies.

    When Luxury Meets Ethics

    In today’s world, transparency is no longer a marketing advantage. It is a demand. SMX’s trueGold enables miners and brands to certify their products molecule by molecule. Shoppers can verify a piece’s origin, composition, and recycled content with absolute confidence.

    This new era of ethical luxury gives artisans and manufacturers something equally valuable: pride in provenance. When creators can prove their materials are responsibly sourced, they elevate craftsmanship into an act of integrity. Every finished product reflects both beauty and honesty.

    The result is a shift in consumer power. Studies from IBM and PwC show that more than 70% of buyers are willing to pay a premium for sustainable, traceable goods. trueGold doesn’t just meet that demand; it defines it. Within a marketplace where perception drives profit, accountability becomes the new gold standard.

    The Human Dividend

    At its core, trueGold is not a story about technology. It is a story about people. It is about the miners who deserve safe conditions, the jewelers who deserve credit for their integrity, and the consumers who deserve to trust what they own.

    Proof brings fairness back to the table. It bridges the gap between developing nations that extract resources and the global markets that consume them. It gives investors confidence, but it also gives communities dignity.

    Gold has always symbolized permanence. Now, through SMX’s science, it finally lives up to that promise. It becomes not just a store of value but a record of truth. One that repairs the divide between what is real and what is claimed.

    Sources and references:

    • https://www.smx.tech/home

    • https://www.smx.tech/technology

    • https://www.thinkava.com/

    • https://finance.yahoo.com/news/smx-fingo-enter-collaboration-mandate-134500842.

    • https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/stockhead/truegolds-unique-technology-enables-transparent-supply-chain-for-gold/news-story/162eff62309eccd101dd59fa96eb3972

    • https://stockhead.com.au/tech/truegolds-unique-technology-builds-trust-and-enables-a-transparent-supply-chain-for-gold-from-mine-to-marketplace-and-recycling/

    • https://engageforgood.com/ibm-2020-purpose-provenance-profits-consumer-goods.

    • https://www.heraldnews.com/press-release/story/3204/truegold-gives-memory-to-gold-jewelry-watches-now-tell-their-own-story/

    • https://finance.yahoo.com/news/smx-fingo-enter-collaboration-mandate-134500842.html

    • https://www.lbma.org.uk/good-delivery/gold-bar-security-features#-

    • https://www.pwc.com/us/en/services/esg/sustainability-news-brief.html

    • https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/industries/consumer-markets/consumer-insights-survey

    • https://www.smx.tech/home

    • https://www.smx.tech/technology

    • https://www.thinkava.com/

    • https://finance.yahoo.com/news/smx-fingo-enter-collaboration-mandate-134500842.htmlhttps://finance.yahoo.com/news/smx-fingo-enter-collaboration-mandate-

    • https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/stockhead/truegolds-unique-technology-enables-transparent-supply-chain-for-gold/news-story/162eff62309eccd101dd59fa96eb3972

    • https://stockhead.com.au/tech/truegolds-unique-technology-builds-trust-and-enables-a-transparent-supply-chain-for-gold-from-mine-to-marketplace-and-recycling/

    • https://www.heraldnews.com/press-release/story/3204/truegold-gives-memory-to-gold-jewelry-watches-now-tell-their-own-story

    • https://finance.yahoo.com/news/smx-fingo-enter-collaboration-mandate-134500842.html

    • https://www.lbma.org.uk/good-delivery/gold-bar-security-features#-

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    The information in this press release includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions or strategies regarding the future. In addition, any statements that refer to projections, forecasts or other characterizations of future events or circumstances, including any underlying assumptions, are forward-looking statements. The words “anticipate,” “believe,” “contemplate,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “intends,” “may,” “will,” “might,” “plan,” “possible,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “would” and similar expressions may identify forward-looking statements, but the absence of these words does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. Forward-looking statements in this press release may include, for example: matters relating to the Company’s fight against abusive and possibly illegal trading tactics against the Company’s stock; successful launch and implementation of SMX’s joint projects with manufacturers and other supply chain participants of gold, steel, rubber and other materials; changes in SMX’s strategy, future operations, financial position, estimated revenues and losses, projected costs, prospects and plans; SMX’s ability to develop and launch new products and services, including its planned Plastic Cycle Token; SMX’s ability to successfully and efficiently integrate future expansion plans and opportunities; SMX’s ability to grow its business in a cost-effective manner; SMX’s product development timeline and estimated research and development costs; the implementation, market acceptance and success of SMX’s business model; developments and projections relating to SMX’s competitors and industry; and SMX’s approach and goals with respect to technology. These forward-looking statements are based on information available as of the date of this press release, and current expectations, forecasts and assumptions, and involve a number of judgments, risks and uncertainties. Accordingly, forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing views as of any subsequent date, and no obligation is undertaken to update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date they were made, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required under applicable securities laws. As a result of a number of known and unknown risks and uncertainties, actual results or performance may be materially different from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. Some factors that could cause actual results to differ include: the ability to maintain the listing of the Company’s shares on Nasdaq; changes in applicable laws or regulations; any lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on SMX’s business; the ability to implement business plans, forecasts, and other expectations, and identify and realize additional opportunities; the risk of downturns and the possibility of rapid change in the highly competitive industry in which SMX operates; the risk that SMX and its current and future collaborators are unable to successfully develop and commercialize SMX’s products or services, or experience significant delays in doing so; the risk that the Company may never achieve or sustain profitability; the risk that the Company will need to raise additional capital to execute its business plan, which may not be available on acceptable terms or at all; the risk that the Company experiences difficulties in managing its growth and expanding operations; the risk that third-party suppliers and manufacturers are not able to fully and timely meet their obligations; the risk that SMX is unable to secure or protect its intellectual property; the possibility that SMX may be adversely affected by other economic, business, and/or competitive factors; and other risks and uncertainties described in SMX’s filings from time to time.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • SMX Strikes Gold With Goldstrom to Rewrite the Rules of the Precious Metals Supply Chain

    SMX Strikes Gold With Goldstrom to Rewrite the Rules of the Precious Metals Supply Chain

    SMX (NASDAQ: SMX) and Goldstrom, a global leader in bullion banking, logistics, and trading, are to embed molecular-level traceability directly into gold and silver. The collaboration brings molecular verification to one of the world’s oldest markets, creating a new foundation of transparency, accountability, and measurable proof across the precious metals industry.

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 7, 2025 / Gold has always stood for permanence. It has anchored economies, defined wealth, and survived every reset in global finance. But for all its reputation as the world’s most trusted asset, its foundation has always depended on belief. People believe it’s pure, believe it’s responsibly mined, and believe it’s ethically traded. Belief, however, is not verification.

    SMX (NASDAQ:SMX), through its majority-owned subsidiary, TruGold, and Goldstrom, is working to change that. Their alliance brings molecular memory to gold and silver, giving the metals an identity that cannot be lost, erased, or replaced. Goldstrom, a globally integrated enterprise with reach across bullion banking, trading, logistics, vaulting, and insurance, is integrating SMX’s molecular marking and digital-registry technology into its ecosystem. Together, they are redesigning how trust operates in one of the oldest industries on earth.

    For the first time in history, precious metals can hold their own digital truth. SMX’s markers are permanently embedded at the molecular level, turning gold and silver into self-verifying materials. No stamps, no signatures-just chemistry and data combining to create a new class of authenticated assets.

    Building Proof Into Every Gram

    This collaboration is not symbolic. It’s structural. SMX’s patented molecular markers can survive every phase of a metal’s life cycle-melting, refining, or recasting-while maintaining a link to a secure blockchain registry. That registry records a continuous digital passport for every unit of material, tracking where it originated, how it was processed, and how it re-entered circulation.

    Goldstrom’s network ensures that this system reaches every corner of the value chain. Mining, refining, trading, and insurance clients can integrate traceability directly into their existing workflows without disruption. The outcome is a living ledger of proof that operates within the market itself rather than beside it.

    This framework also connects to SMX’s trueGold™ and trueSilver™ subsidiaries, each built to support memory-enabled supply chains. Every bar, coin, or recycled product carries a story that never loses a chapter. A gold bar refined in Dubai and later recycled in London retains its digital identity, with its chain of custody verified from start to finish.

    This level of traceability is no longer optional. Regulators and industry bodies are locking it into global standards. The LBMA’s Responsible Gold Guidance, the UAE’s Good Delivery system, and Europe’s Digital Product Passport all point to the same direction: proof must be built in, not added after.

    SMX and Goldstrom are responding with precision. Their partnership delivers a compliance solution that becomes a competitive advantage. Each verified metal molecule moves faster through financing and trade because transparency shortens verification time and reduces uncertainty.

    In the process, authenticity becomes measurable and immediate. Refiners gain clarity. Banks gain confidence. Investors gain data that cannot be forged.

    Turning Compliance Into Value

    For companies positioned at the forefront of this shift, transparency is evolving from cost center to profit engine. Every ounce already carries a market price; now it carries an embedded proof of origin and sustainability. That transforms ESG accountability into an asset.

    With SMX technology inside Goldstrom’s network, clients can trade and insure with traceable certainty. Regulators and financial institutions gain molecular-level visibility into sourcing and recycling, replacing reports and declarations with verifiable evidence. Each transaction adds a new layer of trust, and that trust becomes measurable capital.

    What used to be a slow paper process now operates in seconds. Every verified record strengthens market integrity and helps eliminate fraud, duplication, and gray-market uncertainty.

    The Broader Ecosystem of Proof

    This partnership extends SMX’s reach far beyond metals. Its molecular technology has already proven its value in plastics, textiles, and natural rubber. Adding gold and silver completes the bridge between sustainable materials and traditional stores of value, connecting sectors that once existed in isolation.

    Goldstrom’s global presence aligns perfectly with SMX’s vision of a transparent materials economy built on chemistry and code. Together, they are establishing a foundation where authenticity is not a matter of opinion but of record. What began with recycled packaging now extends to bullion and beyond.

    For an industry defined by trust yet constrained by opacity, this marks a turning point. Certificates fade, audits expire, but molecular proof endures. Every atom of metal now carries a signature that links physical value to digital certainty.

    SMX and Goldstrom are not merely modernizing verification; they are redefining what gives gold its worth. Proof has become part of the metal itself, a measurable asset in a data-driven world. In that world, authenticity is no longer assumed. It is quantified. And that makes proof the most valuable currency of all.

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    The information in this press release includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions or strategies regarding the future. In addition, any statements that refer to projections, forecasts or other characterizations of future events or circumstances, including any underlying assumptions, are forward-looking statements. The words “anticipate,” “believe,” “contemplate,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “intends,” “may,” “will,” “might,” “plan,” “possible,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “would” and similar expressions may identify forward-looking statements, but the absence of these words does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. Forward-looking statements in this press release may include, for example: matters relating to the Company’s fight against abusive and possibly illegal trading tactics against the Company’s stock; successful launch and implementation of SMX’s joint projects with manufacturers and other supply chain participants of gold, steel, rubber and other materials; changes in SMX’s strategy, future operations, financial position, estimated revenues and losses, projected costs, prospects and plans; SMX’s ability to develop and launch new products and services, including its planned Plastic Cycle Token; SMX’s ability to successfully and efficiently integrate future expansion plans and opportunities; SMX’s ability to grow its business in a cost-effective manner; SMX’s product development timeline and estimated research and development costs; the implementation, market acceptance and success of SMX’s business model; developments and projections relating to SMX’s competitors and industry; and SMX’s approach and goals with respect to technology. These forward-looking statements are based on information available as of the date of this press release, and current expectations, forecasts and assumptions, and involve a number of judgments, risks and uncertainties. Accordingly, forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing views as of any subsequent date, and no obligation is undertaken to update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date they were made, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required under applicable securities laws. As a result of a number of known and unknown risks and uncertainties, actual results or performance may be materially different from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. Some factors that could cause actual results to differ include: the ability to maintain the listing of the Company’s shares on Nasdaq; changes in applicable laws or regulations; any lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on SMX’s business; the ability to implement business plans, forecasts, and other expectations, and identify and realize additional opportunities; the risk of downturns and the possibility of rapid change in the highly competitive industry in which SMX operates; the risk that SMX and its current and future collaborators are unable to successfully develop and commercialize SMX’s products or services, or experience significant delays in doing so; the risk that the Company may never achieve or sustain profitability; the risk that the Company will need to raise additional capital to execute its business plan, which may not be available on acceptable terms or at all; the risk that the Company experiences difficulties in managing its growth and expanding operations; the risk that third-party suppliers and manufacturers are not able to fully and timely meet their obligations; the risk that SMX is unable to secure or protect its intellectual property; the possibility that SMX may be adversely affected by other economic, business, and/or competitive factors; and other risks and uncertainties described in SMX’s filings from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

  • SMX Global Partnerships Making Gold Honest, Fashion Transparent, and Rare Earths Accountable

    SMX Global Partnerships Making Gold Honest, Fashion Transparent, and Rare Earths Accountable

    NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 7, 2025 / Every company reaches a turning point when its technology stops being promise and starts becoming structure. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is there now. The company that gave matter a memory is no longer demonstrating what’s possible. It’s deploying what’s required. Proof is no longer a side feature of sustainability. It has become the backbone of global trade, and the scale of what SMX is building now stretches from Asia to Europe to the United States.

    For years, SMX quietly refined its system. Molecular markers that live inside materials. Digital passports that travel with them through every transformation. What once sounded like futuristic science has become a necessity as industries scramble to verify what they produce and recycle. Global policies are catching up, and SMX’s network of partnerships shows how verification is evolving into the next major layer of industrial infrastructure.

    Singapore Turns Verification Into Policy

    Singapore sits at the top of that evolution. In partnership with A*STAR, SMX is helping to create a national plastics passport system that assigns a permanent identity to materials from manufacture to reuse. This isn’t a concept or a pilot. It’s a functioning, government-backed standard that establishes digital continuity for every unit of plastic across its lifecycle.

    For Singapore, it’s a statement about national efficiency and compliance. For SMX, it’s a validation of molecular verification at policy level. When a country known for precision engineering and regulatory rigor adopts your system, it elevates the conversation worldwide. What began as a scientific pursuit has turned into legislation in motion, and the rest of Asia is watching.

    Turning Machines Into Proof Engines

    The industrial shift is already visible. SMX’s collaboration with REDWAVE and Tradepro is redefining how recycling operates. REDWAVE’s high-speed sorting systems are being trained to detect SMX’s molecular tags, verifying materials in real time as they move through production lines.

    That kind of instant authentication eliminates the need for manual audits and late-stage paperwork. It transforms uncertainty into measurable data, improving margins and reliability across the supply chain. Tradepro completes the picture by distributing verified rPET into U.S. markets, supplying major brands that now face strict recycled-content mandates.

    Together, these partners are proving that waste streams can become data streams and that the value of a material increases when its story can be verified from origin to reuse.

    Spain Becomes Europe’s Proof Accelerator

    In Spain, SMX has partnered with CARTIF to integrate molecular tracking and analytics into next-generation circular-economy projects. CARTIF’s testing centers act as launchpads for new technologies before they scale across the European Union, allowing SMX to demonstrate its system under real-world industrial conditions.

    The alignment is perfectly timed. Europe’s sustainability rules are becoming more exacting, and traceability is now a requirement for market participation. By working inside CARTIF’s ecosystem, SMX gains faster routes to implementation across manufacturing and municipal networks. This partnership converts European climate policy into a measurable business opportunity and positions SMX at the intersection of compliance and commerce.

    Precious Metals Learn to Speak

    Gold and silver have symbolized trust for centuries, yet their authentication systems remain centuries old. Through trueGold and its collaboration with Goldstrom, SMX is embedding molecular proof directly into bullion. Each bar, coin, or refined lot carries a unique chemical signature that cannot be lost or replicated, creating an incorruptible record of origin and recycling history.

    For traders and refiners, this changes the economics of trust. Verified metals can move faster, carry lower insurance costs, and command higher premiums because risk is reduced. In markets that measure value by confidence, molecular proof is becoming the new hallmark.

    Textiles Add Accountability

    Fashion’s sustainability challenge has always been verification. Through its work with CETI in France, SMX is embedding its technology into textile production lines so fibers and fabrics can carry their own digital passports. CETI’s facilities provide the scale and engineering discipline needed to take SMX’s laboratory precision into everyday manufacturing.

    Brands can now prove where materials come from, how much recycled content they contain, and how they perform over time. Regulators gain transparent data. Consumers gain confidence. And investors gain measurable metrics that align with sustainability-linked financing. In this model, transparency is not a marketing slogan. It’s part of the product itself.

    A Network That Defines the Category

    Each SMX partnership represents a different layer of verification. A*STAR establishes a national template. REDWAVE and Tradepro bring industrial efficiency and distribution. CARTIF gives Europe a platform for proof at scale. Goldstrom integrates it into one of the oldest financial assets in history. CETI proves it can work at the consumer goods level.

    Together they form the skeleton of a global proof economy, one that spans regulations, sectors, and geographies. SMX’s ecosystem is not a collection of pilots. It’s a coordinated framework where science, commerce, and compliance align.

    Proof has become the language of modern industry, and SMX is the company teaching the world how to speak it. What started as molecular research is now a market infrastructure, and every partner it brings into the fold strengthens the same message: in the future of global trade, truth is the most valuable asset of all.

    About SMX

    As global businesses face new and complex challenges relating to carbon neutrality and meeting new governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX is able to offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measuring and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    The information in this press release includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions or strategies regarding the future. In addition, any statements that refer to projections, forecasts or other characterizations of future events or circumstances, including any underlying assumptions, are forward-looking statements. The words “anticipate,” “believe,” “contemplate,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “intends,” “may,” “will,” “might,” “plan,” “possible,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “would” and similar expressions may identify forward-looking statements, but the absence of these words does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. Forward-looking statements in this press release may include, for example: matters relating to the Company’s fight against abusive and possibly illegal trading tactics against the Company’s stock; successful launch and implementation of SMX’s joint projects with manufacturers and other supply chain participants of gold, steel, rubber and other materials; changes in SMX’s strategy, future operations, financial position, estimated revenues and losses, projected costs, prospects and plans; SMX’s ability to develop and launch new products and services, including its planned Plastic Cycle Token; SMX’s ability to successfully and efficiently integrate future expansion plans and opportunities; SMX’s ability to grow its business in a cost-effective manner; SMX’s product development timeline and estimated research and development costs; the implementation, market acceptance and success of SMX’s business model; developments and projections relating to SMX’s competitors and industry; and SMX’s approach and goals with respect to technology. These forward-looking statements are based on information available as of the date of this press release, and current expectations, forecasts and assumptions, and involve a number of judgments, risks and uncertainties. Accordingly, forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing views as of any subsequent date, and no obligation is undertaken to update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date they were made, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required under applicable securities laws. As a result of a number of known and unknown risks and uncertainties, actual results or performance may be materially different from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. Some factors that could cause actual results to differ include: the ability to maintain the listing of the Company’s shares on Nasdaq; changes in applicable laws or regulations; any lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on SMX’s business; the ability to implement business plans, forecasts, and other expectations, and identify and realize additional opportunities; the risk of downturns and the possibility of rapid change in the highly competitive industry in which SMX operates; the risk that SMX and its current and future collaborators are unable to successfully develop and commercialize SMX’s products or services, or experience significant delays in doing so; the risk that the Company may never achieve or sustain profitability; the risk that the Company will need to raise additional capital to execute its business plan, which may not be available on acceptable terms or at all; the risk that the Company experiences difficulties in managing its growth and expanding operations; the risk that third-party suppliers and manufacturers are not able to fully and timely meet their obligations; the risk that SMX is unable to secure or protect its intellectual property; the possibility that SMX may be adversely affected by other economic, business, and/or competitive factors; and other risks and uncertainties described in SMX’s filings from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

    SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited

    View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire