The New Zealand Herald

SkyCity leads shares higher

Tower soars on takeover bid

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New Zealand shares rose, with SkyCity Entertainm­ent Group gaining following its first-half earnings while Tower soared 42 per cent on a takeover bid. The S&P/NZX 50 index gained 55.36 points, or 0.8 per cent, to 7121.63. Within the index, 24 stocks rose, 16 fell and 10 were unchanged. Turnover was $96.3 million.

SkyCity Entertainm­ent Group led the index, up 6.2 per cent to $3.97. New Zealand’s only listed casino company posted an 18 per cent lift in first-half profit as improved trading at its key Auckland casino offset a weaker performanc­e from its Australian and high-roller businesses, while the year-earlier profit was hit by writedowns.

“There’s ongoing growth in Auckland, positive momentum appearing to return and you’ve got some projects in Adelaide and New Zealand that could be earnings- accretive acquisitio­ns getting closer day by day,” said Rickey Ward, NZ equity manager at JBWere. Against that, “you’ve got internatio­nal business which is important to this company showing weakness towards the end of that period, which creates a bit of negativity”.

A2 Milk Co rose 4.2 per cent to $2.49, Metro Performanc­e Glass gained 2.7 per cent to $1.54, and Summerset Group Holdings advanced 1.9 per cent to $4.86.

Sky Network Television was the worst performer, down 1.1 per cent to $ 4.33, while Meridian Energy dropped 0.6 per cent to $2.70 and Contact Energy declined 0.4 per cent to $4.79.

Infratil dipped 0.2 per cent to $2.875. The infrastruc­ture investor said a shortage of court space in Wellington due to the November earthquake means hearings on Wellington Internatio­nal Airport’s bid to extend the runway to make room for long-haul flights will likely be pushed out to June. Infratil owns two-third of the airport company.

Outside the benchmark index, Tower jumped 42 per cent to $1.12. Canada’s Fairfax Financial Holdings has offered to buy Tower for about $197 million. The Canadian company has offered to pay $1.17 a share, a 48 per cent premium from Wednesday’s closing price. The transactio­n has been unanimousl­y approved by the Tower board, and shareholde­rs holding 18 per cent of the company — Salt Funds Management and ACC — have entered into firm voting agreements in favour of the transactio­n.

“It’s further highlighti­ng that there is value in our market when a lot of us don’t believe there is. Here’s a company that’s met difficulti­es in the past through an event no one predicted, and the share price didn’t fairly reflect the improvemen­t in the underlying earnings,” Ward said.

“It just highlights, again, corporate activity shouldn’t be ignored. My guess is investors will prefer a takeover bid over a demerger, because it still has an element of uncertaint­y about it.”

Creditors have placed failed crimefight­ing software company Wynyard Group into liquidatio­n, the company announced yesterday.

Wynyard listed on the NZX in 2013, with investors paying $1.15 a share. The stock closed as high as $3.12 in March 2014 but shares were worth just 21.5c when the company eventually went under last October.

 ?? Picture / Supplied ?? Infratil, which owns two-thirds of Wellington Airport, said its bid to extend the runway will likely be pushed out to June.
Picture / Supplied Infratil, which owns two-thirds of Wellington Airport, said its bid to extend the runway will likely be pushed out to June.

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