Otago Daily Times

Market commentari­es

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand shares gained as growing expectatio­ns of lower interest rates stoked demand for companies offering regular dividend income, such as Chorus and Meridian Energy.

Dairy companies A2 Milk Co and Synlait Milk were boosted by stronger demand for dairy products.

The S&P/NZX 50 index rose 59.79 points, or 0.7%, to 9133.51.

Within the index, 27 stocks gained, 14 fell and nine were unchanged. Turnover was $116.9 million.

Stocks across Australia and New Zealand gained as investors increased their bets on both central banks cutting interest rates, boosting the attraction of equities over fixedincom­e assets such as bonds and term deposits.

Reserve Bank of Australia governor Philip Lowe yesterday opened the door to a rate cut in a speech, while weakerthan­expected jobs data reignited speculatio­n New Zealand’s central bank will lean towards a cut.

The S&P/ASX 200 index was up 1.3% in afternoon trading.

‘‘The sharemarke­t loves low interest rates — the cost of capital is cheaper and also investors look for stocks when rates are low,’’ Peter McIntyre, an investment adviser at Craigs Investment Partners, said.

Utilities companies have been a favourite for investors in the low rate environmen­t of the past decade, offering a relatively secure income stream and low equity risk. Chorus rose 2.3% to $5.04 with 847,000 shares changing hands, twice its average volume. Meridian gained 2% at $3.65, a record close, on 1.1 million shares.

Synlait led the market higher, up 5.4% at $9.70 on a very light volume. A2 rose 2.6% to $13.20 on a volume of 1.1 million, in line with its 90day average.

Dairy prices rose 6.7% at the Global Dairy Trade auction overnight. Mr McIntyre said that gain would typically be negative for downstream companies such as A2 and Synlait, but the strong level for demand from Asian buyers was a bigger positive.

Fonterra Shareholde­rs’ Fund units, which give investors exposure to Fonterra’s earnings, fell 0.9% to $4.69 on half its average volume. Fonterra’s shares, which trade on a closed market, were also down 0.9% at $4.69 in light trading.

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare gained 3.4% to $13.26 on a volume of 839,000, compared to its 670,000 average. F&P Healthcare generates half its revenue in US dollars, and benefits when the local currency declines. The kiwi dropped more than half a US cent after weakerthan­expected jobs data was seen as boosting the chance of a rate cut.

Spark New Zealand was the most active stock, with 3.3 million shares changing hands. It fell 1.5% to $4.03. Z Energy rose 0.2% on a volume of 1.3 million, while Sky Network Television dropped 1% to $1.92 on a volume of 1.2 million, twice its average volume.

Of other companies trading on volumes of more than a million shares, Auckland Internatio­nal Airport edged up 0.1% to $7.37, and Fletcher Building was unchanged at $5.04.

Pushpay Holdings fell 3.1% to $3.44 on a volume of 837,000, more than twice its average. The payments software developer yesterday reported a 35% increase in December quarter revenue to US$27.7 million and said it should deliver a substantia­l profit in the March year.

Mr McIntyre said the company had already set investor expectatio­ns for a strong performanc­e in a January update.

NZX fell 3% to 99 cents on very light volumes. The stock market operator’s monthly metrics showed a decline in activity in January, with less trading going through the formal market in what’s typically a holidayaff­ected month.

Outside the benchmark index, Orion Health Group rose 5.2% to $1.21. Founder Ian McCrae yesterday announced plans to mopup the remaining shares, launching a takeover bid with a handful of other investors who collective­ly own more than the 90% needed to force a sale. The consortium will offer $1.224 a share, matching a buyback price accepted by most investors.

Australian shares yesterday enjoyed their fourth straight day of gains as the Australian currency slid further against the US dollar.

The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index closed up 66.4 points, or 1.1%, at 6,092.5 points at 1615 AEDT yesterday, while the broader All Ordinaries was up 67.3 points, or 1.1%, at 6159.1.

The ASX200 has gained 3.87% on the week and was poised for its best week since mid2016.

The Aussie dollar was buying $US 70.99 cents, down from $US 71.09 cents on Wednesday. — BusinessDe­sk/ AAP

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