Most Asian markets edged higher on Monday, with Malaysian stocks recovering after dropping at the open as markets reopened after an election. Meanwhile, oil prices were slightly lower, paring more gains after touching multi-year highs last week.
The FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI recovered after recording early losses of more than 2 percent to gain 0.43 percent as investors digested last week's surprise election victory by an opposition alliance. MSCI's ETF of Malaysian shares had dropped more than 6 percent following the result last week. Meanwhile, the Malaysian ringgit traded at 3.9430 to the dollar at 12:05 p.m. HK/SIN after earlier sliding by almost 1 percent.
Still, shares of Malaysian firms linked to the Barisan Nasional coalition, which lost the election, declined, but pared sharper falls seen earlier: CIMB Group dropped 5.94 percent and AirAsia Group was lower by 4.59 percent.
Stabilization in the stock market came as the new administration, led by new prime minister Mahathir Mohamad, named three ministers to his cabinet over the weekend.