Otago Daily Times

Market commentari­es

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AUCKLAND: New Zealand shares gained yesterday, led higher by Synlait Milk as A2 lifted its stake in the company while Freightway­s and Ebos fell.

The S&P/NZX50 Index rose 15.36 points, or 0.2%, to 8864.52. Within the index, 22 stocks rose, 21 fell and seven were unchanged. Turnover was $107.7 million.

‘‘There were reasonable offshore leads to run our market, and we started to gather a bit of strength after the Aussie market opened,’’ Peter McIntyre, investment adviser at Craigs Investment Partners, said.

‘‘We’re waiting for our own earnings season and still in that void of lack of informatio­n, but compared to Asia we’re tracking up well.’’

Synlait Milk led the index higher, up 2.8% to $11, while A2 Milk traded higher throughout the day but closed down 0.2% to $10.42. A2 will buy another 8.2% of Synlait Milk at a small discount, lifting its holding in the dairy processor to 17.4%.

The milk marketing firm will buy the shares at $10.90 apiece, down 2.3% from the NZX onemonth volumeweig­hted average price of $11.16, for a total of $161.8 million. The shares will come from Tokyoliste­d Mitsui & Co, a general trading company which invests across sectors and bought 8.4% of Synlait at the company’s initial public offering in 2013.

‘‘You’ve got interest like A2 taking a block stake in Synlait, and the way they’ve operated their business and wanting to increase production, the story is still pretty intact,’’ Mr McIntyre said.

‘‘They’re proving themselves to be a reliable and efficient operator as well, that’s attracting the attention pretty much of everyone involved in the sector.’’

‘‘Within that announceme­nt, A2 said they’re comfortabl­e with their position. It’s a key part of the business and I don’t think it’s any surprise they have increased the stake, but where they go from here will be interestin­g, too.’’

Tourism Holdings rose 1.7% to $6.11, Kathmandu Holdings gained 1.3% to $3.14 and Pushpay Holdings advanced 1.1% to $3.85.

Freightway­s was the worst performer, down 1.3% to $7.85. Ebos Group dropped 1.1% to $20.25 and Summerset Group Holdings declined 1.1% to $7.56.

Outside the benchmark index, Briscoe Group was unchanged at $3.55. It lifted firsthalf sales 4.3% to $292.2 million and will report a slightly higher profit on wider margins next month. Homeware sales rose 4.5% and its Rebel Sport chain revenue gained 3.8%, while online sales accounted for 9% of group sales.

‘‘They’re working hard to get what they’re getting there. It’s a tough sector,’’ Mr McIntyre said.

‘‘It’s a wellrun retailer but some of the numbers are borderline flat.’’

‘‘The key segment for them is the sporting goods. That growth was 3.8% and I’d probably say that was disappoint­ing; it has been a stellar performer for them. Online is increasing, as it is for most of the listed retailers in New Zealand, but margins are tight and the impact of minimum wages — there’s a cloud over the sector generally,’’ he said.

‘‘They tend to manage their margins well, they’re efficient operators but they’re eking out average growth.’’

The Australian sharemarke­t closed slightly lower yesterday, dragged down by losses for the banks and the materials sector.

The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 6.1 points, or 0.1%, at 6234.8 points yesterday, while the All Ordinaries was down 1.3 points, or 0.02%, at 6326.4 points.

CommSec’s chief market analyst Steven Daghlian said the banks had struggled all week after gaining by about 4% and 2% for June and July respective­ly. The financial sector closed 2% lower for the week.

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