The chip-heavy South Korean benchmark KOSPI .KS11 ended the week nearly 9% in the red, rounding off a turbulent week of sharp swings in memory chipmakers, the first rate hike in over three years, and regulatory intervention in single-stock leveraged funds that are behind much of the upheaval.
The market was closed on Friday.
Volatility in chipmakers could ease on greater signs about hyperscaler AI capex remaining durable and higher foundry spending translating into sustained earnings growth, said Leung.
In Singapore, equities .STI fell as much as 0.8% to extend declines from the previous session, while the currency SGD= was steady at 1.2899 a dollar.
In Malaysia, stocks .KLSE were up 0.8% while the ringgit MYR= weakened marginally to 4.081 per U.S. dollar, its lowest since early July. Data showed that Malaysia's economy grew 5.8% in the second quarter from a year earlier.
Shares in the Philippines .PSI advanced as much as 1.4%, their highest since early March, while those in Jakarta .JKSE gained as much as 1%, logging their seventh straight session of gains.
Both the Thai baht THB=TH and the Taiwan dollar TWD=TP weakened to their lowest since late April 2025. The rupiah IDR= extended gains into a fourth day, firming to 17,935 a dollar for the first time in two weeks.