Weekend Herald

A2 Milk takes froth off market, but building stocks gain

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New Zealand shares fell as A2 Milk gave up some of its recent gains, while building stocks Fletcher Building and Metro Performanc­e Glass rose.

The S& P/ NZX 50 Index dropped 72.21 points, or 0.9 per cent, to 7639.51. Within the index, 33 stocks dropped, 11 rose and six were unchanged. Turnover was $ 159 million.

“It has been a healthy correction; it was a pretty rough old day but apart from some pockets of volume, the market i s pretty quiet,” said David Price, broker at Forsyth Barr. “We’re in confession season, next week is the last of it; if there’s going to be anything, next week is it.”

A2 Milk was the worst performer, down 5.3 per cent to $ 4.28. The stock soared this week, to a record $ 4.52 on Thursday amid positive sentiment about its upcoming results. Despite yesterday’s fall, it has still gained 10 per cent in the week.

Trade Me fell 1.5 per cent to $ 5.42, Genesis Energy dropped 2.4 per cent to $ 2.43 and Auckland Internatio­nal Airport declined 2.2 per cent to $ 6.80.

Fletcher Building rose 0.8 per cent to $ 7.90. Shares plunged as low as $ 7.48 last week after the building company downgraded its earnings expectatio­ns for the second time, but have been recovering over the past few sessions.

“There’s been inspired buying out of Aus- tralia. People look at it on a multiple basis and it’s cheap versus an expensive market, and versus Aussie peers, that’s where the rerating has come from,” Price said. “That whole sector has been downgraded at a time of expansion — Metro, Steel & Tube, Fletcher Building, Methven, they’ve all been the same.”

Metro Performanc­e Glass was the best performer, up 3.3 per cent to $ 1.55, while Vital Healthcare Property Trust rose 1.4 per cent to $ 2.25. Outside the benchmark index, Methven rose 1.8 per cent to $ 1.13 and Steel & Tube Holdings dropped 1.8 per cent to $ 2.24.

Blis Technologi­es dropped 3 per cent to 3.2c. The Dunedin- based company expects to post a maiden profit in the current financial year as it says it i s positioned for sustainabl­e, profitable growth in a rapidly expanding market.

“During this financial year, the company will continue to invest in growth initiative­s, delivering increased turnover and a profit,” chief executive Brian Watson said in notes prepared for delivery at the annual general meeting in Dunedin yesterday.

Blis had forecast a profit for the 2017 financial year but warned the market in February that pre- tax profit wasn’t going to meet the $ 700,000 forecast. The stock has shed 35 per cent over the past year.

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