Asian stock markets were mixed Monday after crude prices surged following attacks on Saudi Arabia's biggest oil processing facility.
Hong Kong's benchmark tumbled 1.1 percent while Seoul advanced and Shanghai and Sydney were little-changed. Japanese markets were closed for a holiday.
The benchmark US crude price jumped more than $5 per barrel following the attack on oil producer Saudi Aramco's Abqaiq facility, for which Yemeni rebels claimed responsibility. Brent crude, the international standard, was up $6 after spiking nearly $8 at one point.
The jump in crude prices hurt airline stocks and other businesses with big fuel bills and put upward pressure on inflation expectations. At the same time, higher prices are a boost to oil exporters such as Malaysia and temporarily pushed up share prices for crude producers.
"This is obviously not a good day if you are an oil importer," said Christ Weston of Pepperstone Group in a report.
"This isn't just a question of who or even what actually caused the attacks, but some have questioned whether we will we see further attacks and Saudi infrastructure is vulnerable," said Weston.
The Hang Seng index declined to 27,040.47 points following more weekend anti-government protests. The Hong Kong airport reported passenger traffic fell 12 percent in August from a year ago, a sign demonstrations that began three months ago are starting to have an economic impact.
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