Definition
Mal mutaqawwam (مال متقوم) is the narrower category of mal — property that is not only ownable and storable but is also legally tradeable under Shariah. Something can be mal in the broad economic sense yet fail the mutaqawwam test because the Shariah categorically prohibits its use or trade.
Classical examples of things that are mal but not mal mutaqawwam:
- Alcohol: has economic value in non-Muslim markets, but trade is prohibited under Shariah for Muslim parties.
- Pork: same logic.
- Stolen property: even if economically valuable, the original owner's claim invalidates trade.
- Things with no permissible use: e.g., gambling tokens whose only function is bets.
Why this matters for crypto screening
The mutaqawwam test is the Shariah filter that distinguishes between cryptocurrency-as-asset-class (passing) and specific tokens whose underlying activity is prohibited (failing). Bitcoin, Ethereum, and major utility tokens are mal mutaqawwam because they serve permissible economic functions. A token whose protocol is structured around lending at interest, or a token whose primary function is gambling, is mal in the broad sense but fails the mutaqawwam test.
This is why HalalCrypto's screening is gate-1 (business activity exclusion) before any other consideration. A token must clear the mutaqawwam threshold first; only then do the price-formation, liquidity, and contract-execution tests apply. A coin that is structurally tied to riba protocols or haram-industry activity is excluded at the mal-mutaqawwam stage and never reaches the four-gate screen's later filters.
Three categories of crypto failure modes at the mal-mutaqawwam stage
- Riba-protocol tokens: native tokens of lending platforms whose core revenue is interest spread.
- Gambling/lottery tokens: tokens whose utility is to participate in zero-sum payoff structures.
- Haram-industry tokens: tokens explicitly tied to alcohol, gambling, conventional finance, adult content, or other industries excluded under business-activity screening.
A token that fails any of these three is mal mutaqawwam-failed and excluded categorically. See the halal methodology for the gate-by-gate detail.
This is also why liquidity alone never rescues a prohibited token. A coin can trade on every large exchange, have deep markets, and still fail if the underlying activity is impermissible. Market acceptance proves price discovery; it does not prove Shariah tradability.
For screening operations, this keeps the order of work disciplined: exclude prohibited activity first, then analyse market quality.
Order matters.