Fasset, a United Arab Emirates (UAE) financial superapp, has secured approval from Malaysia to provide banking services.
The firm said in a statement on Tuesday that the license completes its ability to provide full-service digital banking to its existing global user base of 500,000 within a regulated sandbox for Islamic fintech innovations, establishing Fasset as the world’s first stablecoin-powered Islamic digital bank.
Fasset seeks to become for people in Asia and Africa what NuBank has been for Latin America: a mass-market gateway to financial inclusion.
According to the statement, there is already strong demand – the global Islamic financial industry surpassed $5 trillion in assets in 2025, with projections suggesting this could double by 2030.
Yet access to Shariah-compliant financial products remains limited across much of the pan-Islamic belt. Fasset is closing this gap.
Powered by its regulatory and tech infrastructure, Fasset said it has built strong Islamic finance foundations as a digital asset platform, serving retail users across 125 countries and an institutional client base that has grown tenfold in 2025.
The platform now records over $6 billion in annualized volume, projected to hit $24 billion by the end of 2026.
The approval of the provisional license marks a major milestone, expanding Fasset’s remit from digital asset investing into full-service, Shariah-compliant banking.
As a deposit-taking institution, Fasset said it will provide asset-backed banking services on-chain, via its secure, all-in-one financial superapp.
Users can now access zero-interest banking products alongside investments in U.S. stocks, gold, and cryptocurrencies.
“We’ve been told for years what’s ‘impossible’: that Islamic finance can’t go global, that banks can’t be built on crypto, that financial freedom isn’t for emerging markets,
“We’re here to prove otherwise. We can now combine the credibility of a global banking institution with the innovation of a fintech insurgent that’s fully halal,” said Mohammad Raafi Hossain, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder of Fasset.
“We’re on track for over $24 billion in volume by year-end 2026, and expect much of that to stay within our Fasset ecosystem, driving strong assets under management and opening the door to new banking services in the future,” he added.
It is noted that today’s banking system remains fragmented and exclusionary.
Everyday realities include the young professional in Pakistan who has few safe ways to build wealth within the current system, a family in Bangladesh seeing their savings eroded by inflation, or a UAE-based small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) struggling to move money across borders.
Fasset said it is designed to solve this through services such as Shariah-compliant investment opportunities, asset-backed savings products that protect against currency volatility, and instant cross-border payments designed for businesses of all sizes.
It said the firm has built credibility as a secure and compliant platform for building wealth through its multiple licenses across jurisdictions.
In addition to the latest license from Malaysia’s Labuan FSA, the company holds various licenses from regulators in UAE, Indonesia, the European Union, Turkey, Pakistan and others.
This regulatory foundation has enabled the firm to deliver Shariah-aligned products such as collateralized loans, asset-backed financing and asset-generating yields.
The new license also expands Fasset’s remit into a fully Shariah-compliant financial ecosystem.
Following its license approval, Fasset said it will expand its offering in the coming months by enabling everyday banking services, investment in global assets and markets, and spending via a crypto card to its global user base.
The crypto debit card will be used for online and in-store purchases wherever Visa is accepted, as well as payments through Google Pay and Apple Pay.
Fasset also plans to launch Own, an Ethereum Layer 2 built on Arbitrum that settles real-world assets from regulated institutions.
“The goal is to rewrite the rules, making banking seamless and accessible, regardless of where customers live,
“There are Islamic banks, and there are crypto banks. But we’re determined to be both: a fully Shariah-compliant bank that runs on stablecoin rails. That’s what makes this approval unique,” Raafi Hossain added.
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