The New Zealand Herald

Shares edge higher in turbulent trading

Vista leads rise as investors bank on cinemas re-opening

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New Zealand shares continued to march higher as investors remained cautiously buoyed by the reopening of the economy and the virus outbreak passing. Vista Group Internatio­nal led the market higher.

The S&P/NZX Index increased 58.38 points, or 0.5 per cent, to 10,818.67. Within the index, 25 stocks rose, 22 fell, and three were unchanged. Turnover was $200.7 million. The NZX saw choppy trading yesterday and was in negative territory for much of the session as investors continued to grapple with economic life returning to a new normal.

Grant Davies, an investment adviser at Hamilton Hindin Greene, said the stocks most affected by the virus were moving in different directions as they adapted to new conditions.

“It’s mixed trading, with ‘Covid stocks’ going in all directions,” he said.

For example, rental campervan operator Tourism Holdings was up 1.2 per cent at $1.68, whereas Air New

Zealand fell 3.5 per cent to $1.225. The benchmark index closed higher, holding its own, while Australia’s market remained under pressure amid brewing tensions between Australia and China. The S&P/ASX 200 Index was down 1.4 per cent at 5pm in Wellington, joining a selloff across Asian equity markets.

Vista led the local market higher, up 7.4 per cent at $1.45 as investors anticipate­d cinemas reopening around the world.

Z Energy rose 1.3 per cent to $3.18 when it resumed trading after raising $290m at a discounted price of $2.90.

Spark New Zealand rose 1 per cent to $4.69 after announcing it had been allocated the first portion of the spectrum band for the 5G network. Fixed-line network operator Chorus increased 0.3 per cent to $7.19.

Dual-listed lenders were among the day’s weakest performers.

Westpac Banking Corp dropped 4 per cent to $16.18, the biggest decline on the day, while Australia & New Zealand Banking Group fell 3.2 per

cent to $16.51.

Davies said the banks had come under selling pressure as investors were jumpy about the prospect of raising capital as they prepare for bad debts related to the pandemic.

Some companies that had rallied on Monday’s announceme­nt New Zealand would move to alert level 2 this week, gave back earlier gains in trading yesterday.

Kathmandu Holdings fell 3.8 per

cent to $1.02.

SkyCity Entertainm­ent Group

dropped 3.4 per cent to $2.55. Yesterday it announced it will reopen most of its New Zealand casino, entertainm­ent and accommodat­ion facilities tomorrow, although with reduced operating hours.

Sky Network Television fell 3.9 per cent to 37 cents, as it gave up some its recent rally. The sudden bounce prompted a “please explain” letter from NZX Regulation over the 45 per cent gain since May 8. Sky said it remained in compliance with continuous disclosure obligation­s.

Outside the benchmark index, media company NZME rose 8.2 per cent to 26.5 cents. The publisher of the Herald and operator of The Radio Network on Monday upped the ante in its bid to buy rival Stuff, lobbying the Government for urgent legislatio­n to let it do so.

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