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Morocco overcome historic Haiti goals to roll into World Cup last 32
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Bosnia beat Qatar to reach World Cup knockout stages for first time
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Brazil advance at World Cup as Swiss, Canada reach last 32
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Vinicius Junior sparkles as Brazil beat Scots to reach World Cup last 32
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Morocco overcome historic Haiti goals to maintain World Cup momentum
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ICC judges sue Trump over 'draconian' sanctions
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Australia teen social media ban has little impact: research
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Tunisia coach Renard demands pride in final World Cup outing
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Trump seeks $88 bn in extra funding, mostly for Iran war
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Switzerland, Canada advance as Brazil eye last 32
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Wyatt-Hodge stars as England ease into Women's T20 World Cup semi-finals
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Bosnia in strong position to reach last 32, Qatar out of World Cup
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Switzerland down World Cup co-hosts Canada to top Group B, both progress
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England captain Stokes 'man enough' to apologise for curfew breach
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France detects first Ebola case outside Africa in current outbreak
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England captain Stokes 'man enough' to apologise after curfew breach
Why SMX Became a Different Market Story in 2025-and Why That Shift Carries Into 2026
NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / January 23, 2026 / Investors encountering SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) for the first time often start with the obvious headline: a dramatic 2025 price move. A rally exceeding 4,000% naturally draws attention, and from a trading perspective, that reaction makes sense.
But the more important question isn't how far the stock moved. It's why it moved-and whether the forces behind that revaluation remain intact.
Between November and late January, SMX's market capitalization expanded from roughly $5 million to nearly $200 million. That kind of repricing doesn't happen simply because momentum traders show up. It happens when a market begins to understand a company differently than it did before.
In SMX's case, investors appeared to recognize something they had previously overlooked: this is not a conventional technology company. It occupies a category of its own.
What the Market Finally Understood
SMX does something few companies can claim. It embeds immutable, molecular-level identifiers directly into physical materials-metals, plastics, textiles, and even liquids-allowing those materials to carry a persistent digital identity from production through end of life.
In practical terms, SMX creates a material-level passport. Provenance, authenticity, and integrity are no longer inferred from documentation or declarations; they are verifiable attributes of the material itself, continuously available throughout the supply chain.
That capability reframed how investors viewed the company.
Some observers have compared the potential impact of this approach to earlier platform technologies that quietly reshaped daily life in the early 2000s. The comparison isn't about consumer behavior-it's about scale and permanence. When verification becomes embedded rather than optional, entire systems begin to operate differently.
Momentum Built on Execution, Not Narrative
The shift in perception wasn't theoretical. It was reinforced by tangible developments.
SMX engaged with Singapore's A*STAR on circularity initiatives, partnered with Dubai's DMCC to monitor precious metals markets, and advanced additional programs that demonstrated real-world deployment. These weren't aspirational announcements-they were signals of operational traction.
As those engagements accumulated, the market began to see SMX less as a concept and more as infrastructure: a company capable of redefining how sustainability, accountability, and circularity are enforced across global supply chains.
Crucially, this wasn't driven by slogans or speculation. It was driven by proof.
The Missing Piece: A Digital Market Layer
Even with material-level verification in place, one element still needed reinforcement: a digital mechanism capable of supporting scale, monetization, and institutional participation-particularly around SMX's Plastic Cycle Token (PCT).
That is where Kraken enters the picture.
Not as the headline. As the reinforcement.
Why Institutions Care About Structure More Than Innovation
Retail investors often focus on novelty. Institutions do not.
Large enterprises, regulators, and global partners assume innovation as a baseline. What they scrutinize instead is durability: whether a platform can withstand audits, cyber risk, regulatory oversight, and operational complexity without becoming a liability.
SMX's alignment with Kraken addresses those questions directly.
SMX already establishes material truth. Kraken strengthens the environment in which that truth operates-enhancing execution security, permissions, and system resilience. Together, they answer the questions institutions ask before committing: Can this scale? Can it integrate cleanly? Can it operate without introducing new risk?
Those answers matter as much as any technological feature.
Why the Order of Operations Matters
It's important to understand the sequence that brought SMX to this point.
First came molecular verification.
Then digital identity via the Plastic Cycle Token.
Only after scale and institutional relevance became real did execution-layer reinforcement arrive.
That order is not accidental.
Institutions do not adopt platforms that are still assembling their foundations. They adopt systems that appear designed for oversight from day one. SMX had already secured meaningful engagements throughout 2025. The Kraken-based treasury strategy announced recently strengthens that posture-but it does not redefine it.
The direction was already set.
Reducing Friction Where Adoption Breaks Down
One of the biggest obstacles to institutional adoption isn't cost or capability. It's disruption.
Kraken allows SMX to integrate into enterprise environments without forcing counterparties to rebuild their own security or treasury frameworks. That lowers barriers, shortens evaluation cycles, and accelerates confidence-particularly around PCT participation.
For institutions, that difference is decisive. Seamless integration often determines whether a platform is approved quickly or deferred indefinitely.
Confidence Compounds in Infrastructure
Once institutions adopt infrastructure, they rarely unwind it quickly. Trust compounds. Switching costs rise. Systems embed themselves.
Kraken strengthens SMX's ability to operate under scale, scrutiny, and complexity. That isn't flashy-but it's exactly what institutions prioritize.
As verification requirements expand and enforcement tightens globally, platforms that function smoothly under pressure gain relevance without needing to reintroduce themselves. SMX is positioning for that moment.
Readiness, Not Noise, Drives Adoption
The recent Kraken announcement drew attention-but its real value lies in deployability, not publicity.
Kraken doesn't make SMX louder. It makes it easier to adopt.
That distinction matters. Platforms that are operationally ready before demand becomes unavoidable are the ones institutions trust when stakes rise. SMX's track record across materials, jurisdictions, and enforcement contexts puts it in that category.
The stock's pullback from its highs doesn't negate that shift. With a market cap still near $200 million-more than 4,000% above November levels-it's clear the market remains engaged.
And with valuations once again accessible, 2026 may bring renewed attention from investors who now understand what SMX actually represents.
About SMX
SMX enables material-level verification across global supply chains, helping companies meet carbon neutrality goals and comply with evolving regulatory standards. Through its marking, tracking, measuring, and digital platform technologies, SMX supports the transition to a more transparent, accountable, and circular economy.
Contact:
Jeremy Murphy
[email protected]
SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
A.Ruiz--AT