Bursa Malaysia on the back foot again for the fifth out of six trading days. — Picture Ahmad Zamzahuri

SINGAPORE, May 28 — Most South-east Asian stock markets fell today, with Malaysia declining for a fifth session in six, while Indonesia extended gains on the back of financial and infrastructure stocks.

“There are lots of pitfalls that could sideswipe the markets,” said Stephen Innes, head of trading APAC at Oanda, referring to the US-China trade issues, N. Korea-US summit and strong US dollar.

US oil futures hit six-week lows on expectations major producers may ease output curbs, while Asian stocks and US share futures gained on signs the United States and North Korea were still working towards holding a summit.

In Malaysia, trading services firms including IHH Healthcare and Sime Darby were among the top losers.

IHH Healthcare fell as much as 4.8 per cent and Sime Darby plunged 9 per cent on disappointing quarterly results.

Vietnam shares fell as much as 2.9 per cent to a more than five-month low. Vinhomes JSC declined 5.5 per cent and Vietnam Prosperity Joint Stock Commercial Bank fell 5 per cent.

Indonesian shares climbed as much as 1.4 per cent and were headed for a fifth straight session of gains. Bank Mandiri (Persero) Tbk PT rose 5 per cent and Bank Central Asia Tbk PT climbed 1.1 per cent.

The central bank said on Friday that it would hold an additional meeting of its board of governors on Wednesday to discuss economic and monetary conditions.

“We suspect that the persistent selloff in the rupiah and upward pressures on local government bond yields (despite the recent 25bps rate hike) may prompt further action,” DBS said in a note.

“Further BI rate hikes may be needed, with the next one possibly as early as this week.” — Reuters