India shares extended losses on Wednesday, a day after the indexes posted their biggest single-day percentage six weeks, dragged lower by Bharti Airtel and Tata Motors.
Singapore stocks extended gains on Wednesday, a day after the index jumped to more than a two-year high, led by Singapore Airlines after a surge in September-quarter profit.
Singapore was ranked fourth among the world's most-visited city in the world in Euromonitor International's latest Top 100 city destinations ranking 2017 edition.
India shares recovered some of the lost ground on Wednesday, a day after the indexes posted their biggest single-day percentage six weeks on surging crude oil prices.
Wall Street ended Monday higher with all three equity indices closing at record highs on talks about potential merger activity, and speculations about Republicans cutting corporate taxes, that would boost earnings.
Singapore stocks closed little changed on Monday, dragged lower by DBS Bank after city-state's largest lender reported a profit fall but gains in other regional markets kept losses in check.