In a major vote of confidence for Pakistan’s emerging fintech scene, Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) Silicon Valley’s heavyweight venture capital firm — has backed ZAR, a new startup founded by Brandon Timinsky, the ex-founder of SadaPay. The company aims to introduce dollar-backed stablecoins to Pakistan’s cash-driven economy through an innovative on-ground and digital model.
A Silicon Valley Bet on Pakistani Fintech
ZAR has reportedly raised US $12.9 million in seed funding, led by Andreessen Horowitz, with participation from Dragonfly Capital, VanEck Ventures, Coinbase Ventures, and Endeavor Catalyst. The investment marks one of the largest early-stage rounds ever raised by a Pakistan-focused fintech with crypto ambitions.
According to Bloomberg, the funding underscores a16z’s growing interest in emerging-market fintechs building real-world applications of stablecoins — digital assets pegged to the US dollar or other major currencies.
Timinsky, who previously built SadaPay into one of Pakistan’s most popular neobanks before its 2024 acquisition by Turkey’s Papara, says his new venture targets “financial access for the cash-reliant majority.”
“We see stablecoins as the bridge between global digital finance and real-world economies like Pakistan,” Timinsky told investors in a recent statement. “Our goal is to make the dollar accessible, stable, and usable for anyone — even without a bank account.”
How ZAR Plans to Work
ZAR’s model blends blockchain technology with Pakistan’s vast agent and retail ecosystem.
- A user can walk into a corner store, phone-shop, or mobile-money agent, hand over cash, scan a QR code, and instantly receive dollar-backed stablecoins in a ZAR digital wallet.
 - The wallet links to a Visa card, allowing spending both online and at physical merchants.
 - Users can hold or convert their stablecoins, creating a digital bridge between local cash and global digital currency.
 
This approach bypasses the need for traditional banking infrastructure — crucial in Pakistan, where over 60% of adults remain unbanked and rely heavily on informal payment channels.
Pakistan: A Testbed for Stablecoin Utility
Pakistan’s economic volatility, frequent currency depreciation, and limited dollar access have made the idea of USD-pegged digital money increasingly appealing. ZAR aims to turn stablecoins from a speculative crypto asset into a mainstream transactional tool — a “digital dollar in your pocket,” as insiders describe it.
Industry observers believe ZAR’s pilot in Pakistan could serve as a template for other emerging markets across South Asia and Africa.
“If ZAR succeeds, Pakistan could become a case study for stablecoin adoption at the retail level,” said Ali Raza, a fintech analyst based in Dubai. “The mix of large unbanked populations, mobile penetration, and dollar demand makes it a perfect testing ground.”
The Regulatory Tightrope
Despite the innovation, ZAR faces regulatory hurdles. Pakistan’s State Bank (SBP) has historically restricted cryptocurrency trading and foreign-currency substitutes. However, global pressure and domestic demand have pushed regulators to re-evaluate digital-asset frameworks.
Sources suggest ZAR’s model operates within a “cash-in, stablecoin-out” flow that avoids speculative trading — focusing instead on remittance facilitation and cross-border payments.
Still, experts caution that clarity on compliance, anti-money-laundering (AML) protocols, and digital-asset backing will determine whether ZAR can scale without conflict.
Why a16z’s Backing Matters
Andreessen Horowitz’s participation signals a broader trend: top global VCs are once again eyeing frontier markets like Pakistan for real-world fintech applications of crypto. The firm, known for its early bets on Coinbase, OpenSea, and Worldcoin, sees ZAR as a continuation of its thesis that stablecoins will underpin the next era of financial infrastructure.
The endorsement could reignite confidence in Pakistan’s fintech landscape, which has cooled since SadaPay’s acquisition and the slowdown in venture funding during 2023-24.
The Road Ahead
ZAR plans to expand its agent network across major Pakistani cities within the next 12 months, followed by international remittance corridors. The startup says it is also in discussions with payment processors and banks for integrations that could enable stablecoin-to-fiat liquidity in real time.
Analysts say ZAR’s success could depend on two critical factors:
- Regulatory green lights from the SBP or a compliant sandbox.
 - Trust and usability among non-technical users, who may be wary of crypto but familiar with digital wallets.
 
For Timinsky, the mission seems personal — continuing where SadaPay left off, but this time “making the dollar digital and borderless.”
Pakistan’s fintech space stands at a crossroads: between regulatory caution and digital innovation. If ZAR can align with policy frameworks while proving that stablecoins can be safe, transparent, and beneficial for everyday users, the country could become a model for Web3-driven financial inclusion in the developing world.
The stakes are high — but so is the potential reward.