- BeanWealth
- Posts
- Cybersecurity Of The Future
Cybersecurity Of The Future
Is this company undervalued?
The financial system is changing faster than anyone wants to admit. We have banks moving money on private blockchains, governments rolling out digital IDs, and regulators rewriting the rulebook for AI in real time. It feels like every week there is another headline about a payment outage, a data leak, or a compliance failure that sends markets into a panic. When trust breaks in a digital world, everything breaks with it.
That is why the next big frontier is not another trading app or consumer fintech idea. It is the infrastructure underneath all of it. A secure computing layer that can keep financial data protected, keep identity verified, and keep transactions compliant even when the system is under stress. Most people are still thinking in terms of cybersecurity software, but the real shift happening right now is much deeper. Institutions are looking for hardware-level trust, encrypted AI oversight, and systems that regulators can validate without exposing sensitive information.
Israel has quietly become a global leader in this world. And one of its smallest public companies is now building something far more important than another security tool. It is creating the foundation for regulated digital finance, confidential AI, and sovereign-grade computing. It is already working with governments and banks, but almost no one on Wall Street is paying attention to it.
That is where this deep dive starts. The market sees a microcap. The clients see critical infrastructure. And when those two realities collide, the upside can be dramatic.
⸻
Who They Are and How They Make Money
When you strip away the buzzwords, Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) Cyber Security is building the technology stack that sits underneath the next generation of regulated finance. Most cybersecurity companies focus on reacting after something goes wrong. Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) is focused on preventing the failures that would shut down banks, tokenized assets, or national payment systems.
At a high level, Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) is an Israeli deep tech company that builds confidential computing hardware and encrypted data infrastructure for clients who cannot afford risk. That includes government agencies, national defense units, central banks, and major financial institutions. These are environments where one breach is not a bad headline, it is a crisis.
The idea driving the business is straightforward. As the world moves deeper into tokenization, digital identity, and real time global settlement, the financial system needs a new backbone. A secure layer that encrypts data while it is being processed and gives regulators the visibility they require without exposing sensitive information. That is the foundation Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) is building.
Their revenue comes directly from this work. Large contracts for confidential computing deployments inside banks. Encrypted governance systems that replace outdated compliance infrastructure. Identity frameworks for institutions shifting from paper KYC to real time credentialing. And software modules on top of that hardware that support digital asset transactions, biometrics, AML scanning, and cross border settlement.
The mix matters because it creates two revenue engines. Long term contracts from governments and banks that tend to be sticky, and recurring software and AI revenue that grows as clients expand their digital finance operations.
Put simply, Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) is not selling a service. It is selling the trust layer that future payment rails, tokenization networks, and regulated AI applications will rely on.
⸻
The Token and Why It Matters for the Platform
Most people see a token and think speculation, but that is not what is happening here. The HUB Token is being designed as the coordination layer for everything inside the TrvstHub ecosystem. It is not meant to replace currencies or act like a typical crypto asset. It is the mechanism that lets institutions, developers, and regulated platforms activate features, manage permissions, and enforce compliance rules in a secure, audited environment.
As finance moves deeper into tokenization and real time settlement, the biggest challenge is not speed or throughput. It is governance. How do you control access without slowing down transactions. How do you enforce identity, jurisdiction, or risk scores at scale without exposing private data. How do you let regulators get the visibility they need without creating new attack surfaces.
HUBT is designed to solve that. Institutions can stake tokens to activate compliance modules, manage identity frameworks, or set permissioning rules. Developers can build on top of Hub’s (HUBC:NASDAQ) confidential computing stack and route usage through a programmable, on chain settlement layer. That gives the ecosystem a predictable way to coordinate security, access, and governance as workloads grow.
What makes this different is how deeply the token is tied into the hardware. Hub’s (HUBC:NASDAQ) architecture anchors sensitive processes inside cryptographic silicon. If the system detects unauthorized behavior or a deviation from expected logic, permissions can be revoked automatically at the hardware level. No manual reviews. No human overrides. That level of enforcement is rare in digital finance.
In short, the token is not the investment thesis. It is the operating system. It gives the entire platform a way to scale securely as institutions move into tokenized assets, digital ID, and compliant AI. And it becomes more important as adoption grows.
⸻
Financials and Why the Market Is Missing the Story
When I look at a deep tech company like Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ), I always start with one question. Is this a real business, or another idea stage cybersecurity company trying to raise money off buzzwords. The financials make the answer clear.
This is not a pre revenue operation. Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) already has products deployed inside banks, government agencies, and critical infrastructure. That instantly separates them from most microcap “AI security” companies that are still stuck on slide decks. Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) has revenue tied to real deployments and technology running inside regulated environments.

The biggest proof point is the European banking deal signed in April. A €20M contract to modernize an entire national bank’s digital infrastructure. Confidential computing, encrypted communications, perpetual AML surveillance. Deals of this size only happen after months of audits and stress tests. If a national bank signs off, the tech is proven.
They also secured an earlier contract worth an estimated $25M annually for ongoing KYC and AML oversight for 1.5M users. That is the exact kind of revenue you want to see. Sticky, high margin, tied to critical compliance. Once Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) is embedded, it becomes part of the institution’s core systems.
On the balance sheet, Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) completed a much needed capital reset. Cleaned up the cap table, restructured liabilities, and now sits with about 22.05M shares. That smaller float gives them room to scale without crushing shareholders with dilution.
What stands out most is how mispriced the stock is compared to peers. Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) trades at roughly a $25M market cap. Companies in this category with similar clients and fewer integrated products trade anywhere between $200M and $400M. Some, like Darktrace, reached multi billion dollar valuations before achieving bank grade deployments. Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) is already operating inside sovereign and financial systems, yet the market values it like a struggling startup.
This is the part almost everyone misses. A company with live deployments, government grade validation, recurring compliance revenue, a full confidential computing stack, and token infrastructure in development is trading below many pre revenue AI startups with no clients and no tech.
The disconnect is massive. And that is exactly where asymmetric setups are created.
⸻
Conclusion
What makes Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) so interesting is that it sits in the one place where every major shift in finance is converging. Digital identity. Tokenized assets. Confidential AI. Real time settlement. Cross border payments. Every one of those trends needs the same thing at the core. A trusted, secure computing layer that regulators can validate and institutions can rely on.
Most microcaps talk about disruption. Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) is already deployed inside banks and government systems, delivering the kind of infrastructure that usually comes from companies much larger. That alone puts it in a different category. It also gives them something very few early stage tech names ever achieve. Proof. Real contracts. Real integration. Real workloads.
The market is valuing Hub (HUBC:NASDAQ) like a speculative idea. The client roster is treating it like critical infrastructure. That gap will not stay this wide forever. As tokenization accelerates and more financial systems adopt confidential computing and on chain governance frameworks, companies with verified deployments will get re rated fast.
For investors looking for an early stage asymmetric setup with actual fundamentals, this is the type of story that deserves attention. A microcap with sovereign grade technology, institutional validation, recurring revenue, and a platform designed for the next decade of regulated digital finance. The risk is real, but so is the opportunity.
Disclosure of Compensation
“The Influencer” and its officers, directors, owners, managers, affiliates, and control persons (collectively referred to as the “Publisher”) have been compensated two thousand U.S. dollars ($2,000 USD) by a third party to publish favorable information (the “Information”) about HUB Cyber Security.
The Information shared by the Publisher is an advertisement.
Because the Publisher has received compensation to distribute this Information, securities laws including Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Rule 10b 5, and Section 17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 require disclosure of the nature and amount of such compensation.
The Paying Party and its affiliates may buy or sell securities of the Issuer before, during, or after the publication of this Information. This may result in profits due to price fluctuations influenced by the dissemination of this content.
Forward-Looking Statements
Certain information provided in this communication may contain “forward-looking statements,” which include “future-oriented financial information” and “financial outlook” under applicable securities laws. These statements are based on management’s current beliefs and expectations regarding business operations, financial performance, strategic plans, and market conditions.
Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from projections. Investors should not place undue reliance on these statements. Factors beyond the Company’s control may affect outcomes.
The Publisher does not undertake any obligation to update or revise forward-looking statements unless required by applicable securities laws. Readers are strongly advised to perform their own due diligence and consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.
Disclaimer for BeanWealth
BeanWealth is a publisher of financial education and information. We are not an investment advisor and do not provide personalized financial advice or recommendations. All content is for educational and informational purposes only.
Information is provided “as is,” without warranty of any kind. BeanWealth makes no representations or guarantees regarding accuracy, completeness, or timeliness. Opinions expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of BeanWealth, its partners, or affiliates.
Investors should conduct independent due diligence before making any investment decisions. None of the information provided constitutes a solicitation to buy or sell any securities.
BeanWealth, its employees, and affiliates may hold positions (long or short) in the securities mentioned, and these positions may change without notice.
Forward-looking statements, estimates, or forecasts are inherently uncertain and based on assumptions that may not occur. BeanWealth assumes no obligation to update or correct information after the publication date and disclaims liability for any loss or damage arising from its use.
Unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this content is strictly prohibited and may result in legal action.