The post Malaysia Asset Tokenisation Roadmap: BNM’s 3-Year Plan to Build a Digital Asset Innovation Hub appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) has kicked off a three-year programme to test real-world asset tokenisation. A newly released roadmap aims to understand how blockchain-based tokenization can transform Malaysia’s financial landscape, from Islamic finance to supply chain management, with industry feedback open until March 1, 2026.
BNM has released a Discussion Paper on Asset Tokenisation to collect feedback from the financial and technology sectors. The goal is to create a Digital Asset Innovation Hub and an industry working group that will explore how tokenization can be used in real-world financial systems.
The plan follows a clear three-year roadmap
BNM’s working group will explore use cases in areas such as:
However, BNM has made it clear that not every idea qualifies, projects must show tangible real-world benefits, use blockchain only when it’s the right fit, and remain technically feasible within current infrastructure.
BNM wants tokenization to fix real-world challenges, starting with Malaysia’s RM101 billion SME financing gap by turning invoices into digital tokens, helping small businesses get quicker and cheaper loans.
The central bank also plans to apply this to Islamic finance, where Malaysia already leads globally. Using tokenized sukuk & smart contracts to automate payments, increase liquidity, and improve Malaysia’s RM2.4 trillion Islamic market, while following Shariah rules.
For sustainability, tokenized green bonds could tie payments to verified climate results, reducing greenwashing and boosting investor trust in Malaysia’s fast-growing ESG sector.
With this structured plan, BNM aims to bridge innovation and practicality, positioning Malaysia as a regional leader in regulated digital finance.
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It’s a guide for industry feedback on how tokenization can be safely applied in finance, forming the base for Malaysia’s digital asset framework.
By converting invoices or assets into tokens, SMEs can access faster, lower-cost financing and improve cash flow transparency.
Yes. Tokenised sukuk and smart contracts can streamline trading, cut settlement time, and boost liquidity in Malaysia’s Islamic markets.
BNM pilots begin in 2026, testing tokenized finance for SMEs, supply chains, and Islamic products before scaling nationwide in 2027.


