-
Strait of Hormuz traffic remains becalmed despite ceasefire
-
Melania Trump denies any links to Epstein abuse
-
American Airlines targets April 30 return to Venezuela
-
Venezuela police tear-gas protesters demanding salary rises
-
Robertson to leave Liverpool at end of season
-
Choudhary smashes Lucknow to dramatic IPL win over Kolkata
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs asks US appeals court to overturn sentence
-
Verstappen Red Bull future in doubt as engineer to join McLaren
-
France's Macron in Rome for first meeting with Pope Leo
-
Angola name former Senegal boss Cisse as new coach
-
Sinner and Alcaraz wobble but advance to Monte Carlo quarter-finals
-
Reed soars to early Masters lead on wings of eagles
-
US Democrats fail in bid to curb Trump's Iran war powers
-
Veteran prop Slimani to return to France with Toulon
-
Iranians pay tribute to slain supreme leader weeks after killing
-
Russian police raid independent Novaya Gazeta media outlet
-
Barton Snow completes Cheltenham-Aintree double in Foxhunters Chase
-
IMF to cut global growth forecast due to Mideast war
-
Jihadists kill Nigerian troops including senior brigadier general
-
Local boy Aranburu sprints to Basque Country stage, Seixas extends lead
-
Russia brands Nobel Prize-winning rights group Memorial 'extremist'
-
England set for World Cup warm-up friendlies in Florida heat
-
Sabalenka pulls out of Stuttgart Open with injury
-
BTS kick off world tour with spectacular South Korea show
-
UK animal charity rescues over 250 dogs from single home
-
Barton Snow has a lot to crow about in Foxhunters Chase
-
Reigning champion Nick Rockett out of Grand National
-
'Free' McIlroy launches his Masters repeat bid
-
US envoy warns EU won't win AI race 'bringing others down'
-
Trump, Vance not 'meddling' in Hungary vote, says US envoy to EU
-
Jihadists kill 18 Nigerian troops including senior brigadier general
-
Mideast war threatens Africa's supply of humanitarian medicine
-
Seven World Cup winners start for England in Women's Six Nations opener
-
China FM vows deeper ties with North Korea on trip to Pyongyang
-
Sinner survives energy dip, end of streak to see off Machac
-
IMF expects to provide vulnerable economies hit by Iran war up to $50 bn
-
Oil prices jump back toward $100 on Mideast ceasefire doubts
-
Player tells Tiger to 'get a chauffeur'
-
Believers rejoice as Jerusalem's holy sites re-open
-
EU lawmakers want to tax Big Tech to fund budget
-
Croke Park boss eager to stage Fury-Joshua heavyweight clash in Dublin
-
Cannes Festival promises escapism in Hollywood-lite edition
-
Stabbed for saying no: Is online misogyny fueling violence in Brazil?
-
Russia's Nobel Prize-winning rights group Memorial branded 'extremist'
-
McIlroy ready for early start as 90th Masters begins
-
Fonseca eases into Monte Carlo last eight meeting with Zverev
-
Verstappen set for fresh F1 angst as engineer nears Red Bull exit - reports
-
Farhadi, Almodovar, Zvyagintsev to vie for top Cannes Festival prize
-
Ambitious Como's Champions League bid tested by Serie A leaders Inter
-
Emperor penguins listed as endangered species: IUCN
SMX Is Redefining the Gold Standard-Not Through Currency, but Through Certainty
NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK / ACCESS Newswire / January 15, 2026 / For generations, economists and market strategists debated when gold might reclaim its formal role in global finance. Theories cycled. Predictions resurfaced. Calls for a return to currency-backed bullion never quite materialized. While that debate continued, a more consequential shift emerged quietly. The next gold standard is not monetary. It is evidentiary.
Gold is entering a phase where its value is increasingly tied not to macroeconomic models, but to its ability to verify itself. The defining question is changing. It is no longer how much gold exists, but how much of it can prove where it came from, how it moved, and what it truly is.
Behind closed vault doors, stress fractures have been forming. Bars with incomplete histories. Inventories inherited through decades of undocumented transfers. Legacy record systems built for a slower, more trusting era. In a world shaped by sanctions, enforcement pressure, and geopolitical risk, assumption is no longer sufficient. Gold's paradox is becoming visible: its reputation rests on certainty, yet much of it cannot independently verify its past.
That gap is what SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is addressing.
From Trust-Based Gold to Verifiable Gold
SMX has designed a framework that treats gold not as a passive asset, but as an accountable one. Its molecular identity technology embeds a persistent marker directly into the metal itself. The identity does not disappear when gold is melted, refined, divided, transported, or reshaped. The metal retains its history through every transformation.
This fundamentally alters gold's role. It stops being an asset that relies on documentation and becomes one that carries its own proof.
For decades, bullion markets operated on a fragile assumption: that what institutions said they held was exactly what they held. Serial numbers, refinery stamps, and paperwork served as proxies for truth. That system functioned when supply chains were shorter and geopolitical oversight was lighter. Today, gold moves through complex global networks, passing through multiple jurisdictions, refineries, and custodians. Each step weakens paper-based identity. Each melt erases context.
Markets no longer fear gold scarcity. They fear uncertainty. A single discovery of compromised bars can cast doubt across entire inventories. No audit regime or certificate system can fully resolve that risk. You cannot anchor financial confidence to a material that can shed its past in a furnace.
When Gold Can Prove Itself
Embedding identity at the molecular level resolves the flaw entirely. Gold becomes self-verifying. It carries its origin, transformation history, and legitimacy within itself. It cannot forget where it came from. This is the gold standard that monetary systems never achieved-not because they lacked discipline, but because they lacked tools.
Once proof becomes intrinsic, gold divides into two clear categories. Verified bullion becomes the premium asset. Unverified bullion becomes a discounted risk. Markets will not debate this distinction; they will price it. Liquidity will follow certainty. Institutions will favor traceability. Regulators will enforce based on evidence rather than inference.
In this environment, gold evolves from a passive store of value into an active store of truth. That truth carries economic weight. Verified gold commands premiums because it minimizes seizure risk, compliance uncertainty, and rejection by counterparties. Gold without proof becomes harder to trade, harder to insure, and harder to trust.
This transition is not philosophical. It is already underway.
SMX is enabling that shift by giving gold something it has never had before: a durable memory. An identity that cannot be forged, misplaced, or erased. In the era ahead, gold's importance will not be measured solely by ounces. It will be measured by certainty.
The next gold standard will not be backed by belief. It will be backed by proof.
Contact: Jeremy Murphy/ [email protected]
SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
F.Wilson--AT