Bank Negara Malaysia has officially launched an ambitious three-year initiative to explore how blockchain-based asset tokenization can modernize the country’s financial system.
The program, announced on November 1, 2025, establishes a Digital Asset Innovation Hub and brings together banks, fintech companies, and blockchain developers to test real-world applications.
The central bank’s roadmap focuses on solving concrete economic problems rather than experimenting with technology for its own sake. Malaysia aims to address a massive $21.5 billion financing gap facing small businesses, modernize its Islamic capital market, and improve efficiency across its financial markets.
Digital Asset Hub Leads the Charge
The Digital Asset Innovation Hub was first launched in June 2025 during the Sasana Symposium, with Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim officiating the event. The hub creates a controlled testing environment where financial institutions can experiment with new digital asset solutions while regulators refine security frameworks and guidelines.
This sandbox approach allows companies to innovate without compromising financial stability or consumer protection. The hub specifically focuses on programmable money and ringgit-backed stablecoins, positioning Malaysia to compete with other Asian financial centers pursuing similar initiatives.
Source: bnm.gov.my
Bank Negara Malaysia has now expanded this hub’s mission with the formal three-year asset tokenization roadmap. The plan includes proof-of-concept projects in 2026, followed by expanded pilot programs in 2027. An Asset Tokenization Industry Working Group, co-led by the central bank and Securities Commission Malaysia, will coordinate the exploration and identify regulatory challenges.
Solving Real Problems for Small Businesses
Small and medium enterprises form the backbone of Malaysia’s economy, representing 97% of businesses and employing nearly half the workforce. Yet these companies face a financing gap exceeding RM101 billion (about $21.5 billion), making it difficult for them to access the capital needed to grow.
Traditional supply chains create barriers for smaller suppliers. Payments flow sequentially from large buyers down through multiple tiers of suppliers, making it hard for small firms to leverage the creditworthiness of major anchor companies. Bank Negara Malaysia believes tokenization can change this dynamic.
The plan involves allowing large firms to issue tokenized invoice receivables representing future payments to suppliers. These digital tokens would carry the anchor buyer’s credit risk and verifiable transaction data. Small businesses could then use these tokens as collateral for financing, transfer them to their own suppliers as payment, or hold them until maturity.
This approach could dramatically improve liquidity for exporters and importers while reducing settlement delays that often hurt smaller trading firms. The tokenization would enable transactions to complete instantly, even outside traditional banking hours.
Modernizing Islamic Finance Through Smart Contracts
Tokenized sukuk (Islamic bonds) could automate payments while maintaining full compliance with Shariah principles. Smart contracts would enable instant execution of agreements, increase liquidity, and improve transparency throughout the Islamic finance ecosystem. This automation could cut settlement times and reduce operational costs while preserving religious compliance.
The initiative also extends to green finance and environmental, social, and governance investments. Malaysian financial institutions have committed over RM240 billion (about $55 billion) in ESG-linked financing up to 2027. Tokenized green bonds could link payouts directly to verified climate metrics, helping prevent greenwashing and building investor confidence in sustainability claims.
Three Guiding Principles Shape the Approach
Bank Negara Malaysia has established clear criteria for evaluating tokenization projects. First, any proposed use case must demonstrate tangible real-world benefits rather than relying on assumptions. Projects need to show concrete value, not just theoretical advantages.
Second, distributed ledger technology should only be used when it actually solves problems better than traditional solutions. The central bank acknowledges that conventional approaches like APIs might work better for some business challenges. Technology adoption must be purposeful, not trendy.
Third, each project must be technically feasible with current capabilities. As the industry matures and infrastructure improves, Bank Negara Malaysia plans to expand into more complex use cases. The phased approach ensures projects can actually be implemented rather than remaining conceptual.
The central bank is actively seeking industry feedback on its discussion paper through March 1, 2026. Stakeholders can submit written responses via email to [email protected], with clear rationale and supporting evidence for their suggestions.
Regional Competition and Collaboration
Malaysia’s initiative positions the country among Asian regulators actively modernizing financial infrastructure through tokenization. Singapore’s Project Guardian now includes over 40 financial institutions testing tokenized asset pilots. Hong Kong is developing Project Ensemble, building wholesale settlement infrastructure for tokenized transactions.
The central bank plans to explore MYR-denominated tokenized deposits and stablecoins while preserving what it calls the “singleness of money” – ensuring full convertibility with traditional currency. Wholesale central bank digital currency integration will also be tested for interbank settlement and cross-border payments.
Despite this forward-looking approach to asset tokenization, Malaysia maintains a cautious stance toward cryptocurrencies. Bank Negara Malaysia emphasizes that crypto assets are not recognized as legal tender due to price volatility and risk factors. The crypto market represents less than 1% of total banking system deposits in Malaysia.
The central bank will limit participation in tokenization pilots to licensed and regulated financial institutions. This permissioned approach aims to maintain governance standards and accountability while exploring innovation. Early pilots will focus on familiar financial assets like bonds, loans, and deposits before expanding to more complex instruments.
The Road Ahead
Malaysia’s three-year tokenization roadmap represents a measured but ambitious step toward digital finance transformation. By focusing on solving real economic problems – from small business financing to Islamic finance modernization – the initiative goes beyond technology experimentation.
If successful, the program could reshape Malaysia’s financial landscape by 2027, establishing the country as a regional leader in regulated tokenized finance. The combination of careful regulatory oversight, industry collaboration, and focus on practical value creation sets a template for how central banks can approach blockchain innovation responsibly.
