The New Zealand Herald

Chorus among leaders as index climbs

Lines operator up but Genesis and Intueri lose ground

- — BusinessDe­sk

New Zealand shares rose, led by Metlifecar­e and Chorus, while NZ Refining and Genesis Energy dropped after reporting earnings and Intueri Education Group sank 25 per cent on confirmati­on of loss of its Australian status.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index gained 88.28 points, or 1.2 per cent, to 7167.46. Within the index, 27 stocks rose, 16 fell and seven were unchanged. Turnover was $199 million.

led the index, up 3.3 per cent to $6.04. On Monday it reported a 31 per cent jump in firsthalf profit that was aided by a gain in the value of its property, while chief executive Glen Sowry cited strong demand for its units and an occupancy rate that has edged up to 97 per cent. gained 3.2 per cent to $4.14,

rose 3.1 per cent

Metlifecar­e Chorus Ryman Healthcare Trustpower

to $8.87, and 2.7 per cent to $4.60. advanced

New Zealand Refining

was the worst performer, down 2.9 per cent to $2.70. Annual profit sank 69 per cent to $47.2m from a record a year earlier, with margins significan­tly lower than 2015 when low global oil prices bolstered earnings, despite the oil refinery operator’s efforts to improve profitabil­ity in the second half.

“It’s within guidance, so I don’t think there’s any surprises there — maybe the dividend was slightly less than was expected by the market,” said Peter McIntyre, investment adviser at Craigs Investment Partners.

“Their cash on hand has reduced, they are talking about further maintenanc­e as well which could impact on the dividend. We’ve seen an uptick in the Singapore margin which bodes well for the first half of 2017. It’s had a reasonable run in to the result, maybe it’s a bit of profit taking or some parts of the market are thinking there are better places to invest, but it looks positive for NZ Refining.”

fell 1.6 per cent to $2.095. The country’s biggest electricit­y retailer posted an 11 per cent decline in first-half earnings as cheap oil and a wet spring kept wholesale prices low, offsetting better margins on the retail side of the business.

“The key factor for that was lower oil prices impacting on wholesale revenues, and warmer weather . . . as well,” said McIntyre.

“I think the market is a bit disappoint­ed with the dividend — they have good free cash flow but the company has been touted as one that’s going to have a progressiv­e dividend into the future, ie an increasing dividend, and maintainin­g that dividend may have surprised the market.”

Genesis Scales

dropped 0.3 per cent to $3.49. New Zealand’s biggest apple exporter boosted profit 6 per cent to $38.2m as it benefited from expanding its business.

“They’ve delivered another great result, particular­ly in the horticultu­re and food ingredient­s divisions. Prob- ably the soft spot was cold storage, where their ebitda was down 7 per cent,” said McIntyre. “They’re a company that tends to over-deliver, so the market was probably expecting this result. There’s obviously institutio­ns there trimming back their position, but I think the share price has held up remarkably well given the volume that trucked through [yesterday].” Outside the benchmark index,

plunged to 1.2 cents. The ailing private training provider will lose its Australian registrati­on in late March, earlier than its planned exit by the end of the year.

The Australian Skills Quality Authority will cancel the registrati­on of Intueri’s Conwal & Associates and Online Courses Australia colleges from March 29. The shares have fallen 96 per cent in the past 12 months, valuing the company at just $1.2m.

gained 11.1 per cent to 30 cents. It will book aftertax losses of between $2.2m and $2.6m on the sale of its upmarket Nosh supermarke­ts in its annual accounts, which it anticipate­s will bolster underlying earnings for the year, having returned to the black in the first half.

Intueri Veritas Investment­s

 ?? Picture / NZME ?? New Zealand Refining fell 2.9 per cent to end at $2.70.
Picture / NZME New Zealand Refining fell 2.9 per cent to end at $2.70.

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