The Northern Advocate

Massive fall for NZ sharemarke­t

Nearly every single stock on the benchmark S&P/NZX50 index was in the red as market tumbles

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New Zealand’s sharemarke­t has tumbled in one of the biggest daily drops that traders have ever seen. Every single stock bar one on the benchmark S&P/NZX50 index was in the red. The index itself fell 3.64 per cent to 8721.2.

Rickey Ward, New Zealand equity manager at JB Were, said of the local sharemarke­t drop:

“It’s one of the biggest one-day falls ever, but not the biggest. It’s certainly the biggest move for some time.

“We don’t have moves like this every day, not for a very long time.”

The share plunge hit some of the New Zealand market’s biggest companies, shaving about $420 million off the total market value of Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, $850m from a2 Milk and $408m from Auckland Internatio­nal Airport.

Ward said growth stocks like a2 Milk, which had played a big part in the share market’s rally over the last year, had acted to drive the market down.

A2 Milk’s share price fell by $1.17 to $9.04 — a decline of 11.4 per cent.

However, Ward said it felt like a market was going through a “reset“after what has been a very strong, record-breaking run.

“This feels more like a reset. Corporates are still growing their earnings — in the US in particular. The underlying outlook still remains reasonably sound.”

He said the problem had been that share prices had been running ahead of company’s earnings prospects, particular­ly for the growth companies.

The local slide followed some Wall St indexes falling by as much as 3.2 per cent overnight Wednesday. Technology stocks led the way. Apple and Amazon, the two most valuable companies in the S&P 500, each had their worst day in 2 and a half years years. Apple slipped by 4.6 percent while Amazon lost 6.2 percent.

The drop was largely due to the US Federal Reserve’s track for higher interest rates pushing yields on US government bonds higher.

The yield on US 10-year Treasuries has been at a seven-year high and closed at 3.17 per cent.

In contrast, New Zealand’s 10-year government bond recently traded at a yield of 2.67 per cent. Sentiment also has been dampened by the spreading US-Chinese tariff fight over Beijing’s technology policy.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund also cut its outlook for global growth this week, citing interest rates and trade tensions.

Leighton Roberts, chief operating officer and co-founder of Sharesies, urged New Zealand investors not to panic.

“Most New Zealanders will be seeing this in their KiwiSaver accounts but it’s a matter of realising that is long-term money.

“For us we are just reiteratin­g don’t panic. If you are confident that you are diversifie­d and in for the longterm it is a time for buying rather than selling. Stay the course you still own the same companies you owned yesterday.”

Roberts predicted volatility in the markets would continue but said that was more a return to normal levels after a low level of volatility.

“We have seen unpreceden­ted levels of low volatility.”

Roberts described the fall as a slight correction and said he hoped markets would recover similar to what had happened in February and March this year after a dip in the markets also sparked by rising bond yields.

Asian markets were broadly lower on Thursday as they too followed Wall Street slump. Japan’s benchmark fell by an unusually wide margin of 3.9 per cent and China’s main index lost 4.3 per cent. Markets in Hong Kong, South Korea, Australia and Southeast Asia recorded similar declines at the time of publicatio­n.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Traders watch as the sharemarke­ts plunge.
Photo / Getty Images Traders watch as the sharemarke­ts plunge.

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