SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company - Class A Ordinary Shares (SMX)
1.3500
-0.0300 (-2.17%)
NASDAQ · Last Trade: Sep 12th, 12:12 PM EDT
Detailed Quote
Previous Close | 1.380 |
---|---|
Open | 1.370 |
Bid | 1.350 |
Ask | 1.360 |
Day's Range | 1.350 - 1.410 |
52 Week Range | 1.100 - 5,925.93 |
Volume | 661,671 |
Market Cap | - |
PE Ratio (TTM) | - |
EPS (TTM) | - |
Dividend & Yield | N/A (N/A) |
1 Month Average Volume | 7,873,118 |
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
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 12, 2025 / What if there was a way to turn plastic waste into billions of dollars... and then reuse that same product waste to make billions more? While countries form committees and regulators argue over new schemes, SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is already running that playbook. The Plastic Cycle Token, or PCT, is not a theory or a white paper. It is a working solution that transforms every verified kilogram of recycled plastic into a secured digital asset. The world keeps debating. SMX keeps proving.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 12, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 12, 2025 / In every major industry, compliance has historically been treated as a cost center. Companies hire consultants, assemble reporting teams, and invest in monitoring systems not because they want to, but because regulators require it. Compliance was always about meeting the minimum threshold to avoid penalties, not about creating value. That mentality is starting to shift.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 12, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 11, 2025 / From the start, recycling was pitched as the low-cost, high-impact fix for the planet's plastic problem. And everyone played along. Governments rolled out bold targets, corporations committed vast sums, and watchdog groups pushed hard for results. Yet the outcome tells another story. Recycling rates remain flat, plastic waste continues to pile up, and confidence in the process has steadily eroded.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 11, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 11, 2025 / Recycling was supposed to be the easy win for sustainability. Policymakers set bold targets, global brands pledged billions, and NGOs pressed for accountability. Yet despite all that ambition, the results speak for themselves. Recycling rates remain stuck, plastics continue to pile up, and skepticism runs deep across the supply chain.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 11, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 10, 2025 / The history of economic growth is often told through waves of efficiency. The steam engine extracted more work from coal, electrification powered entire industries, and the microchip condensed computation into silicon. Each of these shifts delivered not just incremental improvement but an economy-wide dividend, where productivity gains fueled investment, competitiveness, and prosperity. Today, a new kind of efficiency is emerging, one rooted not in how fast we can consume but in how effectively we can reuse. It is the age of material efficiency, and SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is uniquely positioned and able to deliver it.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 10, 2025
Via Benzinga · September 9, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 8, 2025 / Proof has always been the foundation of markets. Money moves on trust, contracts rely on evidence, and supply chains run on verified records. What plastics have lacked is that same currency of proof. That changes now. Through SMX's (NASDAQ:SMX) partnership with Singapore's A*STAR, the world's first national plastics passport is being built.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 8, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 8, 2025 / Trust is the currency that drives consumer markets. A brand may spend millions on advertising, packaging, and influencer campaigns, but ultimately, it's proof that keeps customers coming back. Proof that a product is authentic. Proof that it is safe. Proof that it was made responsibly, and in today's world, proof that it is truly recycled. This is where SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) steps in with a technology that turns the abstract promise of sustainability into something concrete and verifiable.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 8, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 8, 2025 / Plastics have long been cast as an environmental problem, but the conversation is shifting. And that shift couldn't be more timely, happening at a time when the world's supply chains are being defined by supply chain fragility, resource competition, and geopolitical rivalry. Yet that's only part of the story. An even sharper message is breaking through: plastics are now as much about sovereignty as they are about sustainability.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 8, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 5, 2025 / For decades, recycling systems have been trapped by the same barrier: national borders. Every country has its own framework, its own set of rules, and its own definition of success. A plastic bottle recycled in Germany is not the same as one recycled in the United States. A food wrapper collected in Singapore is not counted the same way as one in France. The result has been a fragmented patchwork that slows progress, confuses companies, and prevents true global accountability.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 5, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 5, 2025 / In today's markets, proof has become the most valuable currency. Money only moves when trust is secure, brands rise or fall on credibility, and regulators no longer take promises at face value. We've entered an economy where evidence is not optional- it's the entry ticket. And the companies capable of minting this verifiable proof hold the keys to unlocking entirely new markets. This is precisely where SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) has planted its flag.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 5, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 5, 2025 / Singapore has taken a bold step forward with the launch of its national plastic passport program, powered by SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) technology and its long-standing research partner ASTAR. It's the world's first government-backed initiative of its kind, one that doesn't just intend to boost recycling rates but to fundamentally rewire how value is created from plastics. What makes this moment more than a domestic breakthrough is its potential to become the blueprint for ASEAN, a region whose plastic waste challenge has both staggering costs and immense opportunities.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 5, 2025
Via Benzinga · September 4, 2025
Via Benzinga · September 4, 2025
Keep an eye on the top gainers and losers in Thursday's session, as they reflect the most notable price movements.
Via Chartmill · September 4, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 4, 2025 / For decades, the global debate over plastic waste has been defined more by ambition than by results. Policymakers set targets, global brands pledged billions, and NGOs pressed for accountability. Yet the frameworks underpinning recycling were never designed to succeed. They focused narrowly on PET bottles and food-grade rPET, leaving industrial polymers, automotive resins, textiles, and electronics out of the loop. With such gaps, even the most determined programs fell short.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 4, 2025
Via Benzinga · September 4, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 4, 2025 / Governments, companies, and NGOs have long sought ways to make plastic recycling work at scale. Policymakers set bold targets, global brands committed billions, and environmental advocates pressed for accountability. The intent was never in question. What failed was the system. Recycling frameworks were designed too narrowly, focusing on a sliver of plastics like PET and rPET food-grade packaging while leaving out industrial polymers, automotive resins, textiles, and electronics. The result was a loop that could never fully close, even with the best of intentions.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 4, 2025
Curious about what's happening in today's session? Check out the latest stock movements and price changes.
Via Chartmill · September 3, 2025
Via Benzinga · September 3, 2025
Wondering how the US markets performed in the middle of the day on Wednesday? Discover the movers and shakers of today's session in our comprehensive analysis.
Via Chartmill · September 3, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 3, 2025 / Market inflection points are often hard to recognize until they've already revealed the winners. Carbon credits in the early 2000s. ESG reporting systems in the 2010s. Each began as a niche concept, often dismissed as a policy experiment or compliance burden. But once governments codified them into regulation, the companies at the forefront didn't just grow; they defined categories, captured billions in enterprise value, and rewrote the playbook for sustainability-linked markets.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 3, 2025
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / September 3, 2025 / For decades, the world has struggled to balance the economics of plastic waste with the urgency of sustainability. Policymakers imposed targets, companies pledged billions, and NGOs kept up the pressure. Yet the frameworks were never designed to succeed. Recycling programs focused narrowly on bottles and packaging while ignoring the much larger streams of industrial resins, automotive polymers, textiles, and electronics. The result was predictable: recycling rates stalled, incineration rose, and the promise of sustainable plastics remained an aspiration.
Via ACCESS Newswire · September 3, 2025
Via Benzinga · September 2, 2025