Reweighting drives day of share rises
Rise of 1.7% for country’s biggest listed company
The S&P/NZX 50 Index rose back above 11,000 as the official MSCI New Zealand Index reweightings drove more than $500 million of activity in the market’s busiest day in almost 18 months.
New Zealand’s benchmark index advanced 90.87 points, or 0.8 per cent, to 11,044.54. Within the index, 37 stocks rose, 12 fell, and one was unchanged. Turnover was $626.2m, with 116.4 million shares traded, the most since May 31, 2018.
The volume was driven by the MSCI index reweighting, which added
Mercury NZ to the benchmark tracked by international institutional investors. Mercury fell 3.1 per cent to $4.68, with 52.6 million shares traded, swamping its 90-day average of 1.2 million. Fletcher Building kept its slot in the index when some investors had speculated its woes in recent years might have seen it dropped. The country’s biggest construction firm rose 2.5 per cent to $5.35, with 6 million shares traded, well up on its 1.8 million average. Meridian Energy, the country’s biggest listed company, rose 1.7 per cent to $4.40 on a volume of 12.6 million shares, compared to its 1.7 million average.
Peter McIntyre, an investment adviser at Craigs Investment Partners, said the index reweightings can shift prices and volumes.
“They’re driving bigger volumes and driving investment direction as well. Once you get included in that, you’re going to get picked up,” he said.
Spark New Zealand, which usually averages 3 million shares, rose 2.4 per cent to $4.545 on a volume of 5.9 million shares. Auckland
International Airport was down 2.1 per cent at $9.01 on a volume of 5.2 million shares and Contact En
ergy rose 3.2 per cent to $7.06 with 3.8 million shares traded.
Of stocks trading on volumes of more than 2 million shares, Infratil climbed 4.2 per cent to $4.97, Ryman Healthcare fell 1.5 per cent to $14.22 and Kiwi Property Group increased
0.3 per cent to $1.555.
Fisher & Paykel Healthcare
slipped 0.5 per cent to $20.77 on a volume of 2 million shares, well up on its 635,000 average. The breathing mask maker is due to report first-half earnings tomorrow and McIntyre said investors would be watching to see whether it retained a conservative outlook or upgraded its guidance.
Z Energy rose 3.8 per cent to $4.98 on a volume of 1.7 million shares. The transport fuels retailer was boosted by ASX-listed Caltex Australia receiving an A$8.6 billion ($9b) takeover
offer from Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard.
McIntyre said the offer was a reminder to investors that Z Energy’s dividend yield was attractive at 13 per cent. Tourism Holdings led the market higher, up 6.8 per cent at $3.29 as it came off a two-year low. Chair Rob Campbell bought shares on market yesterday at $3.05 a share. Sky Network Television was up 6.3 per cent at 85 cents, having hit an all-time low last week.
Westpac Banking Corp rose 1.9 per cent to $26.30 after the duallisted lender said chief executive Brian Hartzer would leave at the end of the week over the breaches of antimoney laundering legislation.