SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company - Class A Ordinary Shares (SMX)
1.5750
+0.1350 (9.38%)
NASDAQ · Last Trade: Oct 2nd, 3:53 PM EDT
Detailed Quote
Previous Close | 1.440 |
---|---|
Open | 1.450 |
Bid | 1.570 |
Ask | 1.580 |
Day's Range | 1.400 - 1.645 |
52 Week Range | 1.100 - 2,460.91 |
Volume | 2,725,518 |
Market Cap | - |
PE Ratio (TTM) | - |
EPS (TTM) | - |
Dividend & Yield | N/A (N/A) |
1 Month Average Volume | 5,926,178 |
Chart
About SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company - Class A 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
SMX (NASDAQ: SMX) has announced its groundbreaking entry into the global $824 billion plastics market, introducing its pioneering molecular marker technology. This innovation promises to embed verifiable "digital passports" directly into polymers, heralding a new era of transparency, traceability, and accountability across the entire plastics lifecycle. The move is set
Via MarketMinute · October 2, 2025
NEW YORK, NY, NY / ACCESS Newswire / October 2, 2025 / The plastics market isn't small change. It's a $824 billion global arena - and it's been hungry for proof. Not about the material itself, but about sustainability and recycling measures that can keep its environmental impact in check. The world is done with promises and pledges. What it demands now is verifiable evidence that recycled content is exactly what companies claim it to be.
Via ACCESS Newswire · October 2, 2025
NEW YORK, NY, NY / ACCESS Newswire / October 2, 2025 / We are closer than we think. Not closer in the foggy, geopolitical sense. Closer in the literal tick-tick of a clock. A recent bust in New York City uncovered hundreds of servers and more than 100,000 SIM cards, all ready to flood networks and overwhelm emergency channels. That plot was low-tech, cheap, and terrifyingly effective. It did not need explosives. It only needed numbers. Numbers that turn into noise, noise into chaos, and chaos that very quickly becomes a national emergency.
Via ACCESS Newswire · October 2, 2025
NEW YORK, NY, NY / ACCESS Newswire / October 2, 2025 / The market doesn't reward talk. It rewards proof. Nowhere is that more obvious than in the debate over supply chain circularity. Recycling pledges and sustainability headlines have been plentiful, but hard evidence of what's really moving through the system has been scarce. That's where SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) comes in. It provides the proof that has long been missing, embedding molecular markers directly into materials and positioning itself as the ultimate facilitator of material efficiency.
Via ACCESS Newswire · October 2, 2025
NEW YORK, NY, NY / ACCESS Newswire / October 2, 2025 / The most dangerous plots don't look cinematic. They look ordinary. A server rack in a rented apartment. A shipment of SIM cards that look no different than millions already in circulation. A cloned router indistinguishable from the real thing. That's the camouflage of modern conflict - weapons that hide in plain sight until they scale fast enough to bring entire systems to their knees.
Via ACCESS Newswire · October 2, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / October 1, 2025 / History's most famous breach was not a battle at all. It was a gift. The Trojan Horse slipped past the gates of Troy not because it was stronger than the walls, but because no one questioned its origin. A failure of provenance turned a symbol of victory into the instrument of defeat. That lesson has echoed for centuries, and today's security challenges are repeating the same flaw. Modern "horses" do not arrive carved from wood. They arrive as chips, routers, sensors, and SIM cards.
Via ACCESS Newswire · October 1, 2025
Integrating molecular traceability into recycled plastics to deliver transparent, auditable, and regulatory-ready reporting-to bridge the recycled content gap, lower costs for American companies, and empower new generations of consumers to choose sustainable products.
Via ACCESS Newswire · October 1, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 30, 2025 / COP 29 came and went like the 28 before it: speeches polished to perfection, headlines filled with urgency, and an outcome that changed almost nothing. Three decades of summits and still the world burns plastics instead of recycling them, still accepts fire-safety claims that collapse under pressure, and still mistakes diplomacy for progress.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 30, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 29, 2025 / Three decades. Twenty-nine global conferences. Billions poured into hotels, banquets, travel, and stagecraft. And to be fair, these gatherings weren't in vain. They brought the world's attention to plastics, sustainability, and safety in a way that no single company or country could have done alone. Ambition was never the problem. The intent was real. But after all the speeches and pledges, what do we still see? Plastics burned instead of recycled. Landfills bursting at the seams. Safety standards that collapse under stress tests.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 29, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 29, 2025 / Europe has long been the beating heart of global fashion, but now it intends to become the brain as well. While designers in Paris and Milan set the trends on the runway, the continent's regulators have been setting just as aggressive targets behind the scenes. The EU's Digital Product Passport rules, ESG mandates, and Green Deal initiatives all point to one thing: traceability is no longer optional. It's the law. And the brands that want to thrive under this regime need more than ambition. They need proof.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 29, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 26, 2025 / In Zero Day, the lights flicker, the grid stumbles, and within minutes, society is knocked back to the Stone Age. That's the drama of the show. But it's also a projection of what experts already know. Modern life runs on interconnected systems that assume authenticity. The moment that assumption is violated at scale, trust collapses. A simple blackout becomes a national security event. A jammed channel morphs into a cascade of failures that reach every corner of the economy.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 26, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 26, 2025 / The fashion industry has always traded on image. Logos, marketing campaigns, and glossy runway shows built brands into billion-dollar icons. But behind the glamour sits a brutal reality: supply chains stretched across continents, sustainability promises that often collapse under scrutiny, and counterfeiters who exploit every blind spot. In this environment, words are cheap, and ingredients are even more so. Proof is what has become priceless.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 26, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 26, 2025 / For decades, counterfeiters have thrived in the shadows, hijacking fashion's prestige and siphoning billions from an industry built on brand, trust, and craftsmanship. Fake bags, knockoff sneakers, and copycat fabrics have been smuggled into every corner of commerce, draining value from labels that spend fortunes building reputations. The damage isn't just economic. It erodes consumer trust, dilutes sustainability claims, and turns e-commerce platforms into digital flea markets where fraud masquerades as fashion. The scale is staggering, with trillions lost as of 2025 and counterfeiters adapting faster than the safeguards designed to stop them.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 26, 2025
Bringing molecular traceability to fashion, apparel, and technical textiles across Europe
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 25, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 25, 2025 / They found 300 SIM servers and more than 100,000 SIM cards parked in abandoned apartments inside a 35-mile ring of Manhattan. That was not a garden-variety spammer. That was an industrial logistics play built to disappear into the noise until it became the noise. The Secret Service says the network could have sent tens of millions of messages per minute, jammed cell towers, and blocked emergency channels at a moment when world leaders were in the city. That is the scale problem. Scale turns cheap chips into national weapons.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 25, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 25, 2025 / Pearl Harbor was a failure of imagination, 9/11 was a failure of detection, and the SIM-farm that almost went live in New York is a failure of provenance. They found 300 servers and more than 100,000 SIM cards tucked into apartments inside the city's orbit. That was not a prank or a fraud ring. That was logistics at scale, built to turn everyday telecom hardware into a weapon of disruption. The haunting part is that the operation was domestic. It was not hidden in an adversary's backyard. It was parked on our doorstep, waiting for a bell to toll.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 25, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 25, 2025 / For nearly three decades, world leaders have gathered at United Nations Climate Change Conferences, flying in with the intention of collaborating and issuing declarations meant to inspire. Yet despite the sincerity of these efforts, the outcome at last year's COP 29 felt all too familiar. Like the 28 before it, the summit ended with carefully crafted promises but little in the way of tangible results. The lesson is clear: debate does not recycle, and speeches cannot extinguish fires. The planet isn't asking for more consensus - it's asking for proof.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 25, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 24, 2025 / The news cycle barely had time to breathe before the story broke: federal agents uncovered a sprawling SIM farm hidden across abandoned properties around New York City. At its peak, it was primed to unleash 30 million text messages per minute, threatening to cripple cell networks just as world leaders convened for the UN General Assembly. The operation was elaborate, built on 100,000 SIM cards and hundreds of servers, with the intention of overwhelming real communication with manufactured chaos.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 24, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 24, 2025 / This week's foiled SIM-card plot in New York should be read as both a relief and a lesson. The boots on the ground from the Secret Service, FBI, and local partners deserve absolute praise. Their persistence, tireless surveillance, and hundreds, if not thousands, of man-hours turned up the break that stopped a sprawling SIM farm before it could silence or alter critical communications during the UN General Assembly. That kind of work matters, and it must be applauded.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 24, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 23, 2025 / Decades of global conferences have carried genuine ambition to solve the twin crises of recycling and safety. Year after year, leaders from around the world gather with the intent to act, pledging bold commitments and setting inspiring targets. The passion is real, the urgency is evident, and the desire to create meaningful change is undeniable.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 23, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 22, 2025 / "After 30 years, the question is, are we failing? We must seize what may be our last opportunity." With that statement at COP 29 - the 29th United Nations Climate Change Conference - Prime Minister Russell Dlamini of Eswatini gave voice to a reality the world can no longer ignore. The intent behind these gatherings is genuine. Leaders and negotiators arrive determined to chart a better course for humanity. But sincerity is not the same as success.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 22, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 22, 2025 / The world is drowning in conferences. COP 29, the latest UN Climate Change Summit, came and went like the 28 before it, filled with lofty promises, carefully crafted communiqués, and expenses that could fund an actual recycling plant. The headlines don't change. The applause doesn't change. Even the quotes have a ring of similarity. This year, UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned: "We are in the midst of a climate crisis… humanity and the planet are hurtling towards catastrophe."
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 22, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 19, 2025 / Recycling and fire safety share the same original sin. Both are built on claims that rarely get tested outside of glossy reports and corporate presentations. A green arrow slapped on packaging is supposed to signal recycled content. A chemical datasheet is supposed to guarantee fire resistance. In practice, both are taken at face value, with regulators, insurers, and consumers left in the dark until reality intrudes. And when reality intrudes, it doesn't knock politely. It crashes through with devastation.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 19, 2025
Exposing carbon black and flame-retardant plastics with one scan
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 19, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 18, 2025 / The strength of a nation is measured not only by its military or its economy but by the resilience of its infrastructure. Airports, hospitals, data centers, energy grids, defense facilities, and high-rise buildings are the quiet backbone of modern life, and when they fail, the consequences ripple far beyond the site of the accident. A single fire in a data center can cripple financial systems. A faulty panel in a hospital can put patients at risk. A misrepresented cladding in a high-rise can ignite tragedy on a scale that scars a generation. All of that sends a common and urgent message: National security is not just about borders; it's about materials.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 18, 2025