Hong Kong opened 65 points lower after local U.S.-listed stocks dropped Friday but ended up 104 in light turnover, aided by debt-strapped Greece's agreement to an austerity plan.
Hong Kong finished lower due to a pull-back from Wednesday's big gains and worry over the simmering Greek debt crisis. Funds flowed to laggards in the market.
Hong Kong opened slightly higher but turned south due to weakness on Mainland markets. China raised the price of gasoline and diesel, but oil plays were soft.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index opened 100 points higher, but worries over possible fund raising by Chinese banks helped drive the index sharply lower in the late afternoon.
Weighed down by concerns about the slowing Chinese economy, Hong Kong struggled before posting slight gains when Mainland stocks rebounded from early losses.
Hong Kong opened lower due to pessimism about the U.S. economic recovery and fell below resistance at the 250 day moving average as investors dumped Chinese private companies.
Hong Kong blue chips surged more than 300 points higher in morning trading following gains on Wall Street on Friday, but lost all of that when China markets fell.