The New Zealand Herald

Energy stocks hit by low lake levels

Hydro storage is down due to dry autumn weather

- Graham Skellern

The New Zealand sharemarke­t gave up some of its recent hard-earned gains, led down by the energy stocks hit by dry weather in both the North and South Islands.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index fell 89.28 points or 0.7 per cent to 12,678.55, and the index did stage a late recovery after reaching an intraday low of 12,574.25.There were 51 gainers and 94 decliners over the whole market, with 52.36 million shares worth $197.88m changing hands.

Matt Goodson, managing director of Salt Funds Management, said “the question is, do markets keep on running?

“The corporate earnings outlook is reasonable without being outstandin­g, and it depends on whether central banks will maintain their present monetary policy with inflation starting to creep in.”

With hydro storage presently well below the historical average, the leading energy stocks were pegged back. Meridian fell 14c or 2.38 per cent to $5.75, and Contact was down 25c or 3.23 per cent to $7.50. Mercury Energy declined 15.5c or 2.27 per cent to $6.665, Trustpower shed 13c to $8.64, and Genesis was up 5c to $3.45.

Goodson said it was unusual for the North and South Islands to be dry at the same time and that’s created a problem for the gentailers.

There is a tiny bit of nervousnes­s over government comments about how well the market is functionin­g.

There was also uncertaint­y around the investors positionin­g ahead of the exchange traded funds selling and people were modestly surprised at how well the Contact and Meridian prices held up — and now they have drifted off.

The extent of the BlackRock iShares Global Clean Energy Exchange Traded Funds selling in Meridian and Contact Energy was shown in the substantia­l shareholde­r notices to the NZX.

US global investment manager BlackRock reduced its holding in Meridian from 7.09 per cent to 3.33 per cent, selling nearly 100m shares. BlackRock cut its stake in Contact from 14.35 per cent to 4.86 per cent, selling about 66m shares.

In its third quarter operating report, Meridian said water inflows were 70 per cent of the historical average and 31 per cent lower than the correspond­ing period last year. Generation was 16.5 per cent lower at a 266 per cent higher average price, and customer numbers and retail sales in New Zealand and Australia were up 5.7 per cent and more than 8 per cent respective­ly.

Travel stocks came back to Earth following the start of the transtasma­n travel bubble — Air New Zealand falling 4c or 2.22 per cent to $1.76, and Auckland Internatio­nal Airport, down 3.5c to $7.695 after reaching an intraday low of $7.42.

Other “bubble” stocks SkyCity Entertainm­ent lost 7c or 2.01 per cent to $3.41; while Serko was up 11c to $6.95.

Fisher and Paykel Healthcare was down 35c to $33.50; a2 Milk fell 30c or 3.36 per cent to $8.62; Fletcher Building declined 14c or 1.95 per cent to $7.04; Chorus decreased 7.5c to $6.47; Port of Tauranga shed 11c to $7.36; and Napier Port was down 15c or 4.18 per cent to $3.44.

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