SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company - Ordinary Shares (SMX)
176.03
+19.89 (12.74%)
NASDAQ · Last Trade: Dec 21st, 11:04 AM EST
Detailed Quote
| Previous Close | 156.14 |
|---|---|
| Open | 165.00 |
| Bid | 177.50 |
| Ask | 179.00 |
| Day's Range | 160.50 - 198.00 |
| 52 Week Range | 1.040 - 8,393.25 |
| Volume | 331,277 |
| Market Cap | - |
| PE Ratio (TTM) | - |
| EPS (TTM) | - |
| Dividend & Yield | N/A (N/A) |
| 1 Month Average Volume | 3,851,110 |
Chart
About SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company - Ordinary Shares (SMX)
SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company is a technology-driven organization that focuses on enhancing supply chain transparency and product authenticity through innovative blockchain solutions. The company specializes in developing and implementing proprietary technology that enables the traceability of materials and products across various industries, helping businesses and consumers verify the origins and integrity of goods. By harnessing the power of blockchain, SMX aims to address challenges such as counterfeiting and fraud, promoting greater sustainability and trust within supply chains. Read More
News & Press Releases
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 19, 2025 / Cannabis did not design its infrastructure for permanence. It designed it for speed.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 19, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 19, 2025 / Cannabis is entering a phase where identity matters more than narrative. As federal oversight takes shape, the industry is being pulled out of a patchwork of state systems and into a framework that resembles other regulated categories. In those environments, compliance is not about disclosure. It is about proof.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 19, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 18, 2025 / The conversation around cannabis reclassification, which was formalized through an executive order signed on Thursday, has focused heavily on policy and capital. Far less attention has been paid to operations. That imbalance matters, because regulatory transitions rarely fail at the headline level. They fail inside systems.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 18, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 18, 2025 / Federal reform, if it lands as expected, is not the "green light" many traders are pricing. It is the beginning of federal-grade accountability. Recent reporting suggests President Trump may move toward reclassifying cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III, a shift that changes the tone from cultural debate to regulatory framework.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 18, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 17, 2025 / The cannabis industry has evolved faster than the systems that support it. What began as a loosely regulated agricultural product has grown into a differentiated market spanning medical treatments, wellness products, and adult-use consumption. Yet much of the sector still relies on fragmented reporting, manual documentation, and trust-based declarations to explain what a product is and where it came from.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 17, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 17, 2025 / SMX's violent move was never about price charts. It was about a thesis. And how SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) knows it can work.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 17, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 17, 2025 / Markets prefer simple explanations. A vertical chart invites familiar labels. Momentum. Speculation. A passing frenzy. That framing misses what actually happened with SMX (NASDAQ:SMX).
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 17, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 17, 2025 / The tools driving digital transformation have never lacked innovation. What they have lacked is a reliable connection to the physical world.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 17, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / Gold does not change easily. Its rules, rituals, and trust frameworks have been built over centuries, reinforced by habit as much as by law. When gold markets do shift, it is rarely because of rhetoric or regulation. They move when infrastructure evolves so decisively that the old way of doing things starts to look inefficient by comparison. That is what is happening now, and Dubai is at the center of it.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / For years, even decades, analysts kept waiting for gold to reclaim its role as the foundation of global money. They predicted a return to a monetary gold standard, a moment when central banks would peg currencies to bullion again. But while the world argued about economic theory, the real revolution arrived from an unexpected direction. The next global gold standard will not be financial. It will be forensic.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / For a century, the world has operated on a comfortable illusion. Central banks believe they know how much gold they hold. Sovereign wealth funds assume their reserves are exactly what the paperwork claims. Bullion banks trust that what sits beneath their headquarters is perfectly authentic. But the truth is far more fragile. No country on earth has ever conducted a full, bottom-up authentication of its gold reserves. Not one. Reserve systems rely on certificates, refinery stamps, and legacy chain-of-custody documents that lose meaning the moment a bar is melted or restamped. The world's most important financial backstop has never been tested with modern tools.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / Most companies grow by drifting into adjacent markets. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) never needed that playbook. The company built a molecular identity platform that operates above traditional industry lines, becoming the engine behind a new era of verifiable supply chain integrity.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / For more than a year, SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) quietly built the kind of infrastructure companies talk about but rarely execute. Molecular identity for plastics. Traceability for metals. Verification that survives every transformation inside some of the world's most advanced bullion ecosystems. National circularity programs developed with leading research institutions. These weren't concepts on a slide deck. They were real systems deployed with real partners across multiple continents.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / The world has spent years talking about circularity, ESG integrity, and supply-chain transparency, but the truth is simple. No industry has ever had the verification infrastructure needed to make any of those goals real. Plastics lose identity when they melt. Metals lose identity when they move. Gold loses identity the moment it hits a furnace. Documentation has filled the gap, but documentation was designed for a slower, less interconnected world. Into this vacuum stepped SMX (NASDAQ:SMX), and the company is not moving alone. It is collaborating across plastics, metals, gold, packaging, and national circularity programs to create the world's first verification mesh.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / Every market cycle introduces a new category of assets that feels almost inevitable in hindsight. Sometimes it is a technological leap. Sometimes it's a financial instrument. Sometimes it's a shift in how value is measured. Today, a growing number of investors are beginning to ask whether verified recovery is emerging as the next major asset class. The idea has been around for years, but no company has created a system capable of turning recovery into a measurable economic unit. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) has changed that conversation with its Plastic Cycle Token, and the market is starting to take note.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / There are moments when a company moves from being a name on a ticker to becoming a topic that keeps showing up in investor conversations. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) has entered that moment. What began as a quiet interest in its verification technology has turned into something broader, with traders, analysts, and crypto readers all starting to recognize the same thing. The Plastic Cycle Token is not a side project. It is the organizing layer for a new category of real-world assets built on verifiable truth rather than estimates or intentions.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 16, 2025 / Every major transformation in technology begins with a simple idea. What if everything in a system could be identified, indexed, and retrieved with certainty? Google did that for information by mapping the internet into something searchable. SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is now doing the same for materials by giving physical goods a permanent molecular identity that acts like a truth layer. Once a material can carry its own history, the entire supply chain becomes searchable, auditable, and verifiable.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 16, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 15, 2025 / Markets have always rewarded certainty, but until recently, certainty was static. Verification lived in audits, reports, and compliance binders. Proof existed, but it could not move. It could not travel with assets. It could not be priced in real time. And because it was trapped on paper, it never fully entered the market's value calculus.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 15, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 15, 2025 / For decades, global markets optimized for speed, scale, and efficiency. Supply chains stretched across continents. Materials moved faster. Costs came down. Profits went up. What did not evolve was identity. The assumption was simple. If something passed inspection once, it could be trusted forever.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 15, 2025
The sustainability movement didn’t collapse. It stalled. Not because stakeholders lacked motivation, but because the system couldn’t deliver the one thing it needed most. Proof. For years, manufacturers pushed to incorporate recycled content, regulators tightened expectations, and consumers demanded better. Yet the technical gap remained. How do you verify something that loses its identity the moment it enters the recycling stream?
Via BusinesNews Wire · December 15, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 15, 2025 / For more than a century, the global financial system has rested on an unchallenged assumption. Central banks believe they know what sits in their vaults. Sovereign wealth funds trust the numbers on their balance sheets. Bullion banks operate as if refinery stamps and certificates are enough. But no nation on earth has ever conducted a full, bottom-up forensic audit of its precious-metal reserves using modern verification tools. Not once.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 15, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 15, 2025 / As the market has paid increasing attention to, and begun revaluing, SMX's (NASDAQ:SMX) potential across plastics, gold, rare earths, and hardware authentication, one material has remained largely under-discussed.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 15, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 12, 2025 / SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is not an overnight sensation. For years, it's been building toward the moment that the global supply chain was not yet ready to confront. The idea was simple but disruptive. Materials should not rely on paperwork, declarations, or trust to prove their identity. They should be able to show it themselves with something far more persuasive: PROOF.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 12, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 12, 2025 / For decades, global industries kept moving forward on the assumption that supply chains were essentially reliable. The belief was that materials were what suppliers claimed they were, that certifications reflected real practices, and that sustainability metrics could be trusted because companies intended to act responsibly. That belief worked as long as no one looked too closely. Once governments and markets began demanding actual proof, the old system cracked open. Intention was no longer enough.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 12, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / December 12, 2025 / Whenever a technology shows the potential to reshape supply chains, people naturally lean in. They want to understand how it scales, how it fits, and how it operates within the industrial world already in motion. That level of curiosity is healthy. It reflects a market that recognizes when something new might redefine what's possible.
Via ACCESS Newswire · December 12, 2025
