The New Zealand Herald

Local shares join the global revival

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New Zealand shares joined a global rally after Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell indicated an early pause to higher interest rates, stoking demand for growth stocks such as Pushpay Holdings.

The S&P/NZX 50 index rose 80.92 points, or 0.9 per cent, to 8794.88. Within the index, 34 stocks gained, 10 fell, and six were unchanged. Turnover was $111.1 million.

Pushpay led the index higher, up 5.3 per cent to $3.39 on twice its average volume.

Tech stocks were buoyed by Powell’s comments last night with the Nasdaq up 3 per cent.

Greg Smith, head of research at Fat Prophets, said the Fed’s stance was markedly different to just a few months ago in assessing monetary policy to be just below neutral. That supported stock markets around the world heading into the G20 leaders’ meeting this weekend.

“Risk appetite came back and there was a big bounce in the Nasdaq overnight,” he said.

“That would be good for companies like Pushpay.”

Sky Network Television rose 4 per cent to $2.34 and Summerset Group gained 3.2 per cent to $6.42 on light volumes. rose 1.1 per cent to $10.90 on average volumes of 1.3 million.

Spark New Zealand was the most traded stock with 2.8 million shares changing hands.

The telco rose 1.2 per cent to $4.17, a day after its infrastruc­ture partner Huawei was deemed to be a security risk by the Government Communicat­ions Security Bureau and effectivel­y blocked from building its 5G mobile network. Fixedline network operator Chorus fell 1.4 per cent to $4.775 on a volume of 1.9 million, compared to an average 468,000.

Meridian Energy rose 2.5 per cent to $3.25 on a larger volume than normal of 2.2 million, while Infratil increased 0.9 per cent to $3.57 on volume of 2 million, compared with its 90-day average

of 372,000. Fletcher Building advanced 1.9 per cent to $4.79 on volume of 1.9 million shares. The building company applied to the Commerce Commission to buy a quarry operation, but not the land underneath.

Air New Zealand increased 0.3 per cent to $3.10 on 1.3 million shares.

The airline carried more passengers in October.

Separately, chief executive Christophe­r Luxon sold 1.5 million shares on market for $4.575 million yesterday. He still holds 3 million shares. Gentrack sank 7.5 per cent to $6.15.

It warned that Brexit had created uncertaint­y among the utilities software provider’s customers.

Smith said the company’s earnings were in line with guidance, but that investors were nervous about the situation in Europe with Brexit and Italy’s budget projection­s. Outside the benchmark index,

Augusta Capital fell 0.5 per cent to $1.085 on light volumes. It more than doubled first-half profit after shifting its focus to managing assets and syndicatio­n offers rather than simply investing directly in property.

Moa Group was unchanged at 43c after narrowing its first-half loss and affirming plans to break even.

Pacific Edge rose 2.6 per cent to 40c after reporting increased sales and a smaller first-half loss. The bladder cancer test maker announced plans to raise another $12 million at 35c. QEX Logistics was unchanged at $1.28 after tripling first-half sales and saying it’s on track to deliver $60m of annual revenue.

Risk appetite came back and there was a big bounce in the Nasdaq overnight. Greg Smith, head of research at Fat Prophets

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Moa Group was unchanged at 43c after narrowing its first-half loss.
Photo / Dean Purcell Moa Group was unchanged at 43c after narrowing its first-half loss.
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