Malaysia based digital asset fund manager Halogen Capital Sdn Bhd has closed a 13.3 million ringgit (about 3.2 million dollar) funding round that positions it as one of Southeast Asia’s more serious regulated RWA tokenization players.
A detailed announcement carried by MediaOutreach and summarised by the Laotian Times confirms that the round was led by Kenanga Investment Bank with participation from 500 Global and other investors.
- Kenanga’s private equity arm now holds a 14.9 percent stake in Halogen, making it the company’s largest institutional shareholder.
- The funding will support expansion of Halogen’s tokenization initiatives across funds, fixed income and real estate assets.
Halogen is a licensed digital asset manager whose new capital will fuel RWA efforts in unit trusts, bonds, sukuk, private credit and property.
Shariah-Compliant Crypto As A Beachhead
Halogen is not a pure RWA newcomer. It already runs a suite of Shariah compliant crypto and income funds that give it a foothold in Islamic finance.
Its own website lists products such as the Halogen Shariah Bitcoin Fund, the Halogen Shariah Ethereum Fund and a multi crypto “Crypto Titans” basket alongside more traditional income funds. Distributor platforms like FSMOne and eUnitTrust highlight the funds as among the world’s first Shariah compliant cryptocurrency products.
Local business media such as The Edge note that Halogen was founded in 2023 and has grown assets under management to roughly 400 million ringgit by late 2025, with its Shariah Bitcoin fund ranked as one of Malaysia’s top performers according to LSEG Lipper data.
This existing base of regulated, Islamic friendly crypto exposure is what Halogen now plans to extend into a broader Shariah compliant RWA stack.
What Halogen Wants To Tokenize
The new 3.2 million dollars in funding is earmarked for a tokenization strategy that spans multiple asset classes, according to Halogen’s press statements and RWA trackers like RWA.xyz.
Planned focus areas include:
- On shore unit trust funds – bringing tokenized units of regulated Malaysian funds on chain, potentially with same day or near real time settlement.
- Bonds and sukuk – packaging conventional bonds and Islamic sukuk into tokenized instruments that still respect Shariah rules around interest, asset backing and risk sharing.
- Private credit – opening access to SME and consumer credit exposures that are currently only available to local institutions.
- Real estate – fractionalizing income generating property, possibly with cash flows distributed as Shariah compliant profit sharing rather than interest.
Because Halogen is licensed and supervised in Malaysia, each of these will need to fit within both Shariah principles and the country’s evolving digital asset rules.
Malaysia’s Bid To Become An Islamic RWA Hub
This funding round also fits into a bigger regional story.
Malaysia has long promoted itself as a global centre for Islamic finance, home to large sukuk markets and Shariah compliant banking infrastructure. Halogen’s move into tokenization provides a bridge between that legacy and the emerging world of on chain RWAs.
Regional coverage in outlets like Tech in Asia frames the deal as part of a broader push where Malaysia’s regulators cautiously allow innovation in digital assets while keeping guardrails in place.
In parallel, Gulf hubs like Dubai and Abu Dhabi are courting similar Islamic finance plus crypto combinations. That sets up a quiet race to become the default jurisdiction for Shariah compliant RWA issuance, where Malaysia’s first mover advantage on regulated crypto funds could matter.
Constraints And Risks
Even with a supportive funding round and regulatory status, Halogen faces a set of challenges:
- Regulatory complexity – every tokenized structure has to satisfy both local securities rules and Shariah standards, which can slow product design.
- Investor education – many Islamic finance investors are conservative and will need clear explanations of how tokenized sukuk or crypto funds fit their risk and religious rules.
- Competition – Western RWA leaders such as Ondo and Maker’s RWA program, plus Middle Eastern initiatives, are all looking at similar segments.
Still, by combining a licensed fund platform, live Shariah crypto products and a fresh capital injection, Halogen is better positioned than most to experiment in this niche.
Conclusion
Halogen Capital’s 3.2 million dollar raise, led by Kenanga and 500 Global, is more than just another regional funding headline. It marks a concrete step toward Shariah compliant tokenization of unit trusts, bonds, sukuk, private credit and real estate in Malaysia.
If Halogen can navigate regulatory and religious constraints while building user friendly products, it could help turn Malaysia into one of the key hubs where Islamic finance and on chain RWAs converge.
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