UAE-Regulated Fuze Secures Jordanian Central Bank Approval for Major Expansion

Another digital asset player gets the regulatory green light—but this time, it's crossing borders with official blessing.
The Regulatory Stamp
Fuze, already operating under the watchful eye of UAE authorities, just locked down approval from Jordan's central bank. That's not just a nod—it's a formal invitation into a new market, bypassing the usual regulatory quagmire that strangles so many crypto ventures. They're not sneaking in the back door; they're walking through the front with paperwork signed.
Why This Move Matters
Expansion is one thing. Regulated, sanctioned expansion into a fresh jurisdiction? That's the playbook for 2026. It signals a shift from the 'move fast and break things' era to 'move deliberately and build bridges.' Other platforms are still wrestling with compliance headaches in single markets, while Fuze is stitching together a cross-border network with official permits. It turns regulatory hurdles into stepping stones.
The Bigger Picture
Watch this space. When a crypto firm starts collecting central bank approvals like stamps in a passport, it's building something traditional finance can't easily dismiss—a licensed, interoperable framework. It’s a quiet but powerful rebuttal to the old guard that still thinks digital assets operate in the shadows. Of course, getting the stamp doesn't guarantee users will come—just ask any legacy bank with a perfect compliance record and dwindling customers.
The bottom line? Permissioned growth is becoming the new competitive edge. While speculators chase the next meme coin, the real infrastructure is being built by those who can sit down with regulators—and leave with a deal.
Fuze enters Jordan
The announcement was made at an official ceremony hosted by His Excellency Dr. Adel Al-Sharkas, Governor of the Central Bank of Jordan, alongside Deputy Governors His Excellency Mr. Ziad Asa’ad Ghanma and His Excellency Dr. Khaldoun Abdullah Al-Wshah, and the Chairman of the Jordan Securities Commission, His Excellency Mr. Emad Abu Haltam, amongst other senior officials.
Mohammed Ali Yusuf (Mo Ali Yusuf), CEO of Fuze, said, “We are humbled and privileged to be selected by the Central Bank of Jordan to support the advancement of virtual assets within the Kingdom. We welcome the opportunity to collaborate with Jordan’s regulated financial institutions and explore compliant ways to enhance financial services and enable the population to safely trade and own digital assets.”
In late 2025, UAE-regulated Fuze partnered with Remit Now, Pay Later platform Jazari to support cross-border money movement using compliant blockchain technology to modernize the region’s $200 billion remittance market.
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