The New Zealand Herald

Late rally brings stability to NZ market

- Graham Skellern

An uncertain New Zealand sharemarke­t suddenly burst into life at the end of another light trading day — with concerns over rising inflation and interest rates continuing to call the tune.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index had a bumpy day but rose strongly in the last 45 minutes, climbing from a low of 12,753.32 to an intraday high of 12,806.9, up 16.74 points at the close.

Volume, surprising­ly, was as low as 37.34 million share transactio­ns worth $72.3 million. There were 74 gainers and 62 decliners across the market.

Greg Smith, head of retail for Devon Funds Management, said: “I think institutio­nal investors are a bit late getting back to the market.

“There’s a bit of lull, with little or no corporate news to speak of. People are trying to second guess how the inflation and interest rate dynamic will play out.”

Smith said one positive was that economic growth in China, New Zealand’s key customer, was not slowing as much as expected.

China’s gross domestic product increased four per cent in the quarter ending December, ahead of the expected 3.6 per cent.

It was, however, the weakest quarterly expansion in 18 months, and economic growth was running at 8.1 per cent for the year, he said.

Market leader Fisher and Paykel Healthcare increased 21 to $31.69; Port of Tauranga gained 7c to $6.50; Chorus collected 6c to $7.04; Serko, which has lately been under pressure, recovered 14c to $6.15; and new listing Ventia Services Group was up 8c to $2.30.

The property companies were stronger. Argosy rose 4.5c to $1.595; Property for Industry gained 4c to $2.96; Goodman Property Trust also increased 4c to $2.63; and Precinct Properties was up 2c to $1.65. Among the energy stocks, Mercury was up 6c to $6.06, and Meridian was down 11c to $4.66.

SkyCity Entertainm­ent gained 5c to $2.95; Vista Group rose 5c to $2.22; Heartland Group Holdings increased 4c to $2.59; and EROAD was up 8c to $4.88. T&G Global collected 8c to $2.97; DGL Group picked up 4c to $3.10; My Food Bag gained 2c to $1.13; and CDL Investment­s rose 4c to $1.12. Honey and health supplement­s distributo­r Me Today rose 0.004c to 6.8c.

Rakon and NZME, which had the two biggest individual rises last year, continued to fall. Rakon was down 4c to $1.99, and NZME declined 5c to $1.20.

Freightway­s was down 26c to $12.72; Mainfreigh­t declined 85c to $92.15; and wine exporter Delegat Group decreased 15c to $14. The retail stocks were mixed. The Warehouse Group fell another 8c to $3.42, Michael Hill Internatio­nal was down 4c to $1.47; Briscoe Group gained 10c to $6.55; and Hallenstei­n Glasson was up 7c to $6.95. Other decliners were Napier Port, down 3c to $3.03; Vulcan Steel decreasing 7c to $9.99; Livestock Improvemen­t Corporatio­n falling 10c to $1.30; Smartpay Holdings shedding 2.5c to 71.5c; and ikeGPS down 5c to 73c.

Chatham Rock Phosphate rose 0.009c to 13.3c after announcing it is starting a feasibilit­y study to produce dicalcium phosphate from the Korella and Korella South mines in Queensland.

The phosphate is an essential ingredient in the diet of farmed animals and has recently struck supply chain difficulti­es.

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