The New Zealand Herald

NZ shares dip as Mercury, SkyCity fall

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New Zealand shares dropped back, led lower by Mercury NZ and SkyCity Entertainm­ent Group. The S&P/NZX50 Index fell 30 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 9195.57. Within the index, 31 stocks fell, 15 rose and four were unchanged. Turnover was $123.8 million.

The local market didn’t repeat Tuesday’s 2 per cent gain, when 38 stocks rose and turnover was $203m.

David Price, broker at Forsyth Barr, said Tuesday was a “day in isolation”.

“Volumes were quite good, and it was the only day we’d had up in a week or so. Every other day has been a drift down.

“The results season was okay — there were more downgrades than upgrades for us,” Price said.

“The market needed more to push on, and I don’t think there was the expectatio­n we were going to get it because there’s been a lot of costs coming at business through fuel, wages across the board. “That’s going to be the problem going forward.” Mercury was the worst performer, down 2.7 per cent or 9 cents to $3.29. Yesterday it gave up rights to a 9.1 cent final dividend. SkyCity dropped 2.4 per cent to $4.07 and Air New Zealand fell 1.7 per cent to $3.16. New Zealand Refining Co, which shed a 3 cent final dividend, dropped 1.6 per cent or 4 cents to $2.54. Sky Network Television declined 1.4 per cent to $2.08. Comvita was the best performer, up 2.6 per cent to $5.92. Scales Corp rose 2.3 per cent to $4.91 and Pushpay Holdings gained 1.9 per cent to $3.86.

Market operator NZX gained 0.9 per cent to $1.08. It has signed a memorandum of understand­ing with the operator of the tech-heavy Nasdaq bourse to let top-tier American companies apply for a secondary listing locally. The deal is the latest effort by NZX to develop closer links with internatio­nal peers as it seeks to promote local investment products and drive greater liquidity through its own platform.

Outside the benchmark index, Tilt Renewables was unchanged at $2.31. Its independen­t directors have repeated their advice that shareholde­rs reject a takeover offer from major shareholde­rs Infratil and Mercury NZ. Tilt announced a 15-year supply deal with Victoria’s state government for part of the output from the company’s proposed Dundonnell wind farm. Infratil dipped 0.6 per cent to $3.465.

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Air New Zealand fell 1.7 per cent to $3.16 in yesterday’s trading.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Air New Zealand fell 1.7 per cent to $3.16 in yesterday’s trading.

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