The firm slumped 12 per cent to 2.60 ringgit at the open but recovered slightly to sit at 2.71 ringgit, still down 7.82 percent, by 0315 GMT.
The Airbus jet disappeared en route from Surabaya in Indonesia's east Java to Singapore after the crew requested a change of flight plan due to stormy weather. Indonesia's National Search and Rescue Agency said it is likely at the bottom of the sea.
However, Shukor Yusof, founder of aviation research firm Endau Analystics told AFP investors and creditors will remain firmly behind AirAsia and its CEO Tony Fernandes, who transformed a floundering carrier into Asia's most successful budget airline.
Indonesia resumed a sea and aerial search at dawn today for the Airbus A320-200 plane that went missing in the Java Sea yesterday morning.
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Five aircraft will be sent to search for the plane, including two C-130 military transport aircraft and a Boeing 737, Indonesian air force spokesman Hadi Cahyanto told AFP.
Economist Yeah Kim Leng, dean of Malaysia University of Science and Technology School of Business, said any impact on the share price will be short-lived since there was nothing to stop the growth of the aviation industry in Asia.
The aircraft was operated by AirAsia Indonesia, a unit of Malaysia's AirAsia which dominates Southeast Asia's booming low-cost airline market.
AirAsia, which has never suffered a fatal accident, said the missing jet last underwent maintenance on November 16.
The plane's disappearance comes at the end of a disastrous
year for Malaysian aviation.
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 disappeared while flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in March with 239 passengers and crew, and in July flight MH17 was shot down over troubled Ukraine killing all 298 on board.