Weekend Herald

Labour’s possible impact on dollar boosts exporters

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New Zealand shares rose, with Fisher & Paykel Healthcare edging up to a record on speculatio­n that the Kiwi dollar would weaken under a Labour- led Government, providing a boon to companies with offshore sales. A2 Milk and Mainfreigh­t added to the benchmark index’s gains.

The S& P/ NZX 50 Index rose 47.27 points, or 0.6 per cent, to 7851.53. Within the index, 24 stocks gained, 18 fell and eight were un- changed. Turnover was lighter than average at $ 116 million.

The kiwi fell late on Thursday, although it is up on the week, after a Colmar Brunton poll showed National down 2 points to 39 per cent and Labour unchanged on 43 per cent.

“As we move towards the actual election day and polls indicate the possibilit­y of Labour getting in, people are starting to form views on different aspects such as the currency,” said Rickey Ward, NZ equities mana- ger at JBWere NZ. “We’ve seen pockets of strength in companies favourably exposed to a weaker New Zealand dollar.”

F& P Healthcare, which gets almost half its sales in North America, got as high as $ 12.62, before ending the day up 0.9 per cent at an all- time high close of $ 12.61. A2 Milk, the milk marketer that has enjoyed strong sales growth in Australia and China, rose 1.9 per cent to $ 5.91.

Mainfreigh­t, which has transport and logistics operations across the globe, rose 0.5 per cent to $ 24.58.

Auckland Internatio­nal Airport led the market higher, rising 2.6 per cent to $ 6.60. Trustpower rose 1.9 per cent to $ 5.45 and Vista Group Internatio­nal increased 1.8 per cent to $ 5.55.

Briscoe Group rose 1.4 per cent to $ 3.75 after the homeware and sporting goods chain lifted first- half profit 4.8 per cent to $ 28.6 million, even as margins shrank in the face of unseasonab­le winter weather and heightened competitio­n.

New Zealand Oil & Gas fell 2.8 per cent to 68.5c after a rival bid emerged for partial control of the energy explorer and producer. Cornerston­e shareholde­r Zeta Resources formally lodged its partial takeover offer of 72c apiece for the 42 per cent of shares it doesn’t already own, something NZOG’s independen­t directors are inclined to reject as too cheap. The company has received an in- dicative partial bid by minority shareholde­r OG Oil & Gas at 77c a share, which the independen­t directors will assess when they have more informatio­n.

Kathmandu Holdings rose 1.8 per cent to $ 2.27, Scales Corp increased 1.8 per cent to $ 3.41 and Trade Me Group gained 1.8 per cent to $ 4.59. Australia & New Zealand Banking Group was the biggest decliner on the NZX 50, falling 1.4 per cent to $ 31.80.

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