The New Zealand Herald

Big price swings as index slides further

Correction seems in play as results draw closer, says analyst

- Graham Skellern

After the heady rises in individual stocks and the leading index last year, the New Zealand sharemarke­t has moved into a correction trend with another more than 1 per cent drop.

The market had its sixth successive day of falls and some leading stocks, such as Fisher & Paykel Healthcare and the energy companies, are having big price swings.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index fell 186.33 points or 1.43 per cent to 12,838.36 after reaching an intraday high of 13,114.50. There were 43 gainers and 104 decliners over the whole market on volume of 60.3 million share transactio­ns worth $125 million.

Greg Smith, head of research for Fat Prophets, said a correction seems to be under way to a certain extent.

“Perhaps optimism has been replaced by a dose of realism. The world still has coronaviru­s, the vaccine will take time to roll out, and it looks like our border — and the tourism sector — won’t open up to more visitors and countries as quickly as we may have thought.

“Maybe the hot air has come out of the markets — some are saying US equities are the most over-valued since before the 1929 crash,” Smith said. “A crash here is highly unlikely — we had one last year — and equities remain appealing for dividend yields compared with what you get from bonds or cash in the bank.”

Smith said the market was in a waiting mood before financial reporting season — the United States is imminent and New Zealand’s next month.

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare

went from an intraday high of $32.99 in early trade to $31.42 at the close, falling 22c on trade worth $16.9m.

Auckland Internatio­nal Airport

was also heavily traded, shedding 23.5c or 3.10 per cent to $7.335 on trade worth $17.7m. Ebos Group was down 41c to $28.50; a2 Milk declined 26c or 2.36 per cent to $10.75; Serko fell 19c or 3.31 per cent to $5.55; and

Spark was down 9c or 1.86 per cent to $4.75.

Pacific Edge continued to fall after its recent strong run, down 7c or 6.19 per cent to $1.06. Tourism Holdings was down another 8c or 3.39 per cent to $2.28.

The energy stocks continued to run out of puff after their frenetic rises. Contact was down 37c or 3.87 per cent to $9.18, Meridian fell 43c or 5.46 per cent to $7.44, Mercury slipped 2c to $6.90, and Genesis decreased 10c or 2.7 per cent to $3.60.

Restaurant Brands — another up and down stock — rose 38c or 3.39 per cent to $11.58.

Kiwifruit grower and packer

Seeka continues to find favour, rising 10c or 2.12 per cent to $4.81 after sitting at $3.95 on December 4.

Vista Group Internatio­nal has appointed NZX chair James Miller as an independen­t director, and its share price slipped 1c to $1.53. Miller is also a director of ACC, Mercury NZ and Refining NZ.

Blackwell Global Holdings is winding down its finance company operations after failing to raise sufficient capital to fund the growth of its loan book. Blackwell is now looking at a reverse takeover, and its share price sits at 0.008c, down 0.001c or 11.11 per cent.

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