The New Zealand Herald

Trading grabs a snooze after volatile year

Activity in a lull ahead of GDP news, says expert

- Graham Skellern

After a pretty hectic — and at times volatile — year, the New Zealand sharemarke­t went into a slumber with few significan­t price movements. The S&P/NZX 50 Index slipped for the second day running, falling 67.95 points or 0.53 per cent to 12,767.17. The index has now fallen 1.18 per cent in two days. There were 45 gainers and 88 decliners over the whole market with volume reaching 80 million shares worth $222.22 million in a late surge of trading, which prompted some turnaround in prices, particular­ly Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, Meridian Energy, Ebos, and Briscoe Group.

Greg Smith, head of research with Fat Prophets, said the market was looking a little tired. “It is in a lull . . . awaiting some fresh developmen­ts.

“The latest gross domestic product figures on Thursday will show a strong bounce and does this mean that the Reserve Bank will lower interest rates further?”

The latest GDP figures are expected to show growth in the national economy of 11-13 per cent for the three months ending September compared with the June quarter — spurred by the hot housing market and increased consumer spending.

The NZ dollar fell slightly, trading in a range of 70.69c-70.93c against the American greenback.

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare staged a rebound during the day, rising to $32.50, but it was hit by the late fall on the market and finished at $32.06, down 1c on trade worth $32.5m. The other market leader, a2 Milk, was up 14c to $14.20.

After a strong rise the day before,

Contact Energy went the other way, falling 27c or 3.26 per cent to $8.02. New listing Harmoney declined 11c or 3.67 per cent to $2.89; and Infratil was down 8c to $7.10.

After strong moves during the day,

Meridian closed with a gain of 7c to $6.60 and retailer Briscoe finished at $5.07, up 12c or 2.42 per cent.

Kiwifruit grower and packer

Seeka said the A$26.5m ($28.13m) sale and leaseback of its Australian orchards, totalling 100ha, is now completed and its share price rose 10c or 2.35 per cent to $4.35.

Pushpay Holdings went into a trading halt while its co-founder Chris Heaslip and executive director Chris Fowler sell a total of 54.6m shares, reducing their holdings from 4 per cent to 0.2 per cent, and 2.4 per cent to 1.2 per cent respective­ly. The software company is completing a bookbuild of $95.7m at $1.75 a share.

Pushpay last traded at $1.89, and reaffirmed its latest operating earnings (edbitdaf) forecast of US$54m$58m ($76.3-$82m). Smith said Pushpay has been in a great position in the US church sector enabling parishione­rs to donate electronic­ally, and its share price has risen strongly.

“May be they are near a term peak for the stock,” he said. “This is not the first major sale of shares from company executives, and it is not a good look.”

Argosy Property has settled its insurance claim with NZI and QBE in relation to the Kaikoura earthquake for $23.5m, and its share price moved 1.5c to $1.56. Stride Property Group’s share purchase plan for $2.14 a unit has closed oversubscr­ibed at $50m, and its share price rose 1c to $2.20.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand