-
Mertens and Zhang win Australian Open women's doubles title
-
Venezuelan interim president announces mass amnesty push
-
China factory activity loses steam in January
-
Melania Trump's atypical, divisive doc opens in theatres
-
Bad Bunny set for historic one-two punch at Grammys, Super Bowl
-
Five things to watch for on Grammys night Sunday
-
Venezuelan interim president proposes mass amnesty law
-
Rose stretches lead at Torrey Pines as Koepka makes cut
-
Online foes Trump, Petro set for White House face-to-face
-
Seattle Seahawks deny plans for post-Super Bowl sale
-
US Senate passes deal expected to shorten shutdown
-
'Misrepresent reality': AI-altered shooting image surfaces in US Senate
-
Thousands rally in Minneapolis as immigration anger boils
-
US judge blocks death penalty for alleged health CEO killer Mangione
-
Lens win to reclaim top spot in Ligue 1 from PSG
-
Gold, silver prices tumble as investors soothed by Trump Fed pick
-
Ko, Woad share lead at LPGA season opener
-
US Senate votes on funding deal - but shutdown still imminent
-
US charges prominent journalist after Minneapolis protest coverage
-
Trump expects Iran to seek deal to avoid US strikes
-
US Justice Dept releases documents, images, videos from Epstein files
-
Guterres warns UN risks 'imminent financial collapse'
-
NASA delays Moon mission over frigid weather
-
First competitors settle into Milan's Olympic village
-
Fela Kuti: first African to get Grammys Lifetime Achievement Award
-
Cubans queue for fuel as Trump issues oil ultimatum
-
'Schitt's Creek' star Catherine O'Hara dead at 71
-
Curran hat-trick seals 11 run DLS win for England over Sri Lanka
-
Cubans queue for fuel as Trump issues energy ultimatum
-
France rescues over 6,000 UK-bound Channel migrants in 2025
-
Surprise appointment Riera named Frankfurt coach
-
Maersk to take over Panama Canal port operations from HK firm
-
US arrests prominent journalist after Minneapolis protest coverage
-
Analysts say Kevin Warsh a safe choice for US Fed chair
-
Trump predicts Iran will seek deal to avoid US strikes
-
US oil giants say it's early days on potential Venezuela boom
-
Fela Kuti to be first African to get Grammys Lifetime Achievement Award
-
Trump says Iran wants deal, US 'armada' larger than in Venezuela raid
-
US Justice Dept releases new batch of documents, images, videos from Epstein files
-
Four memorable showdowns between Alcaraz and Djokovic
-
Russian figure skating prodigy Valieva set for comeback -- but not at Olympics
-
Barcelona midfielder Lopez agrees contract extension
-
Djokovic says 'keep writing me off' after beating Sinner in late-nighter
-
US Justice Dept releasing new batch of Epstein files
-
South Africa and Israel expel envoys in deepening feud
-
French eyewear maker in spotlight after presidential showing
-
Olympic dream 'not over', Vonn says after crash
-
Brazil's Lula discharged after cataract surgery
-
US Senate races to limit shutdown fallout as Trump-backed deal stalls
-
'He probably would've survived': Iran targeting hospitals in crackdown
SMX and Gold's New Gold Standard: How Verification Is Replacing Assumption in Global Markets
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / January 23, 2026 / SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) is reshaping what the "gold standard" means in modern finance-not as a theory of currency backing, but as a system of proof. For decades, economists and policymakers debated whether gold would ever reclaim a formal monetary role. That debate cycled without resolution. What has resolved, quietly and decisively, is something more operational and more consequential: in an era defined by enforcement, sanctions, and geopolitical risk, gold's value is increasingly determined by its ability to verify itself.
The next gold standard is evidentiary, not monetary.
Gold is entering a phase where legitimacy, traceability, and compliance are no longer secondary considerations. For regulators, custodians, and institutional holders, the defining question is no longer how much gold exists in theory, but how much of it can credibly demonstrate origin, custody, and integrity as it moves across borders, refineries, vaults, and ownership regimes. Markets that once relied on trust, precedent, and documentation are now being tested by scrutiny that those systems were never designed to withstand.
Behind the scenes, structural weaknesses have become harder to ignore. Significant portions of global gold inventories carry incomplete or inherited histories. Bars have passed through multiple jurisdictions over decades with records that are fragmented, inconsistent, or unverifiable. Legacy systems-built on refinery stamps, serial numbers, and paper trails-functioned in a slower, more cooperative world. Under today's enforcement environment, assumption is no longer sufficient. Gold's paradox is now visible: it is prized for certainty, yet much of it cannot independently substantiate its own past.
This is the gap SMX is designed to close.
By embedding a persistent, molecular-level identifier directly into gold itself, SMX enables the metal to carry verifiable identity through refining, transport, division, remelting, and reuse. That identity does not depend on external databases, custodial declarations, or documentation that can degrade over time. It is inseparable from the material. Gold no longer needs to be trusted-it can be tested.
For regulators, this marks a shift from inference to evidence. Compliance moves from paper-based review to material-based verification. For institutions, it introduces a clearer framework for managing counterparty, seizure, and rejection risk in a market where a single discovery of compromised inventory can reverberate broadly. And for global trade, it establishes a new distinction that markets will inevitably price: gold that can withstand inspection versus gold that cannot.
In this emerging framework, verification becomes the new gold standard. Not as a slogan or an aspiration, but as an operational requirement. Gold that can prove itself clears more efficiently, insures more readily, and trades with greater confidence. Gold that cannot increasingly carries friction, discounting, and exposure.
This transition is not speculative, and it is not distant. It is already unfolding as oversight tightens and enforcement becomes routine. As that reality settles in, liquidity will follow certainty. The gold standard is returning-but this time, it is backed not by belief, but by proof.
Contact:
Jeremy Murphy
[email protected]
SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
E.Flores--AT