The Fort Worth Press - SMX: The Identity Gap Is Becoming the World's Most Dangerous Blind Spot

USD -
AED 3.673049
AFN 64.502307
ALL 80.999854
AMD 377.510038
ANG 1.79008
AOA 916.999872
ARS 1404.502223
AUD 1.401925
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.701691
BAM 1.642722
BBD 2.014547
BDT 122.351617
BGN 1.67937
BHD 0.376984
BIF 2955
BMD 1
BND 1.262741
BOB 6.911728
BRL 5.199598
BSD 1.000176
BTN 90.647035
BWP 13.104482
BYN 2.868926
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011608
CAD 1.355915
CDF 2225.000142
CHF 0.769895
CLF 0.021648
CLP 854.803684
CNY 6.91325
CNH 6.90889
COP 3672.83
CRC 494.712705
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 92.899369
CZK 20.41165
DJF 177.72007
DKK 6.28765
DOP 62.624975
DZD 129.532956
EGP 46.773897
ERN 15
ETB 155.35043
EUR 0.841479
FJD 2.18395
FKP 0.731875
GBP 0.732625
GEL 2.690035
GGP 0.731875
GHS 11.000154
GIP 0.731875
GMD 73.999988
GNF 8774.999872
GTQ 7.671019
GYD 209.257595
HKD 7.81735
HNL 26.515054
HRK 6.339398
HTG 131.086819
HUF 319.339026
IDR 16789
ILS 3.077095
IMP 0.731875
INR 90.68435
IQD 1310.5
IRR 42125.000158
ISK 122.179971
JEP 0.731875
JMD 156.494496
JOD 0.708969
JPY 152.91899
KES 128.999836
KGS 87.449774
KHR 4029.999935
KMF 414.402826
KPW 899.999067
KRW 1444.73992
KWD 0.30685
KYD 0.83354
KZT 493.505294
LAK 21474.999899
LBP 85549.999692
LKR 309.394121
LRD 186.625007
LSL 15.959764
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.295038
MAD 9.116981
MDL 16.898415
MGA 4436.000038
MKD 51.834101
MMK 2099.913606
MNT 3568.190929
MOP 8.053234
MRU 39.905864
MUR 45.679866
MVR 15.449857
MWK 1736.000379
MXN 17.19915
MYR 3.915031
MZN 63.942625
NAD 15.959777
NGN 1351.75941
NIO 36.719984
NOK 9.472815
NPR 145.034815
NZD 1.65094
OMR 0.384507
PAB 1.000181
PEN 3.357498
PGK 4.285011
PHP 58.271971
PKR 279.749752
PLN 3.54825
PYG 6605.156289
QAR 3.64125
RON 4.280186
RSD 98.754039
RUB 77.100352
RWF 1454
SAR 3.750405
SBD 8.058149
SCR 14.11527
SDG 601.497015
SEK 8.882715
SGD 1.261295
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.350471
SLL 20969.499267
SOS 571.500677
SRD 37.777062
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.9
SVC 8.752
SYP 11059.574895
SZL 15.959698
THB 31.053002
TJS 9.391982
TMT 3.51
TND 2.845977
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.6333
TTD 6.783192
TWD 31.344803
TZS 2590.154021
UAH 43.034895
UGX 3536.076803
UYU 38.350895
UZS 12305.000194
VES 384.79041
VND 26000
VUV 119.366255
WST 2.707053
XAF 550.953523
XAG 0.011886
XAU 0.000197
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802643
XDR 0.685659
XOF 550.503104
XPF 100.67497
YER 238.325029
ZAR 15.87164
ZMK 9001.198967
ZMW 19.029301
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSC

    -0.0704

    23.6212

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    1.7600

    90.52

    +1.94%

  • RIO

    1.7200

    98.96

    +1.74%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    60.905

    +1.17%

  • AZN

    9.5000

    202.9

    +4.68%

  • GSK

    -0.4400

    58.38

    -0.75%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    25.66

    -0.66%

  • BCC

    -1.3900

    88.34

    -1.57%

  • BP

    1.7250

    38.695

    +4.46%

  • CMSD

    -0.0090

    24.071

    -0.04%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16.98

    -2.53%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.2650

    13.045

    +2.03%

  • RELX

    -1.5700

    27.72

    -5.66%

  • VOD

    0.3710

    15.621

    +2.38%

SMX: The Identity Gap Is Becoming the World's Most Dangerous Blind Spot
SMX: The Identity Gap Is Becoming the World's Most Dangerous Blind Spot

SMX: The Identity Gap Is Becoming the World's Most Dangerous Blind Spot

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.

Text size:

That assumption no longer holds.

Across finance, manufacturing, energy, defense, and sustainability, the same failure point keeps appearing. Materials move, transform, blend, melt, shred, and re-enter circulation, but their identity does not survive the journey. Paper trails break. Certificates lose relevance. Declarations replace proof. What once felt like administrative inconvenience is now emerging as systemic risk.

This is the identity gap, and it is rapidly becoming the most expensive problem markets did not price in.

When Materials Lose Identity, Risk Multiplies Quietly

Gold bars in sovereign vaults carry stamps, not memory. Silver flows through industrial supply chains at speeds no audit system can follow. Cotton fibers lose origin the moment they are spun. Plastics become indistinguishable after shredding and recycling. Hardware components circulate globally with no persistent authentication.

Each of these systems relies on trust layered on top of documentation. That model worked when enforcement was light and incentives were aligned. It fails when regulation tightens, sanctions expand, and verification becomes mandatory rather than optional.

Unverified materials introduce invisible liabilities. They compromise ESG claims. They undermine sanctions compliance. They weaken reserve credibility. They expose manufacturers to recalls, fines, and reputational damage. The cost does not appear immediately. It accumulates silently until an audit, investigation, or geopolitical event forces the issue.

Markets do not tolerate unknowns forever. They eventually demand proof.

Regulation Did Not Create the Problem, It Exposed It

The identity gap did not emerge because regulators became aggressive. It existed long before enforcement caught up. What changed is that regulators, insurers, financiers, and counterparties are now aligned around one principle. Claims are no longer sufficient.

Carbon disclosures without verified inputs are being challenged. Recycled-content mandates are being scrutinized. Sanctions compliance now reaches backward through supply chains. Hardware authentication has become a national security issue, not an IT problem.

This shift exposes a hard truth. Legacy systems were never designed to carry identity at the material level. They were designed to record transactions, not preserve truth through transformation.

Once a material changes form, its history disappears.

SMX Targets the Gap Others Cannot Reach

SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) approaches the problem from the only place it can be solved. The material itself.

Instead of tracking paperwork, SMX embeds molecular identity directly into physical materials. That identity survives melting, shredding, blending, recasting, and reuse. Gold retains its fingerprint. Silver carries its provenance. Plastics prove recycled content. Cotton maintains origin. Hardware components authenticate themselves.

This is not a software overlay. It is an infrastructure layer.

By giving materials a persistent, verifiable identity, SMX closes the gap that paperwork, stamps, and declarations never could. Proof becomes intrinsic, not inferred.

Why Every Sector Is Facing the Same Reckoning

The identity gap is not sector-specific. It is structural.

Precious metals face sovereign audits and sanctions scrutiny. Industrial metals face counterfeit risk and illicit sourcing. Textiles face forced-labor enforcement. Plastics face recycled-content mandates. Electronics face authentication and security concerns. Defense and aerospace face zero-tolerance requirements.

Different industries. Same vulnerability.

Once verification exists, anything without it becomes questionable. Markets do not wait for mandates. They preemptively discount risk. Materials that cannot prove identity lose mobility, pricing power, and financial utility.

This is how two-tier systems form. Verified materials become preferred. Unverified materials become constrained.

Proof Is Becoming Infrastructure, Not a Feature

What SMX is building is not a compliance tool. It is foundational infrastructure for a world that no longer accepts assumptions.

Identity that persists through transformation changes how markets behave. It enables pricing differentiation. It strengthens balance sheets. It supports enforcement without friction. It restores trust without reliance on belief.

Most importantly, it scales across industries without needing reinvention. The same identity framework applies whether the material is gold, silver, plastic, cotton, or silicon.

That universality is what makes the identity gap so dangerous and its resolution so valuable.

The Cost of Ignoring Identity Is Rising Fast

Markets punish late adopters. They always have.

Companies, institutions, and governments that move early to secure verifiable materials will gain credibility, access, and leverage. Those who delay will absorb the cost of forced transitions, rushed audits, and reputational damage.

The identity gap is no longer abstract. It is measurable. And it is closing.

SMX is not chasing trends. It is addressing the one structural weakness every modern system shares. When materials can prove who they are, markets can finally trust what they hold.

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 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.

Contact: [email protected]

SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited



View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

H.Carroll--TFWP