Weekend Herald

NZ shares end the week up as a2 Milk slumps

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New Zealand shares rose as Goodman Property Trust’s joint venture with GIC sold seven buildings in downtown Auckland, and as Ryman Healthcare chalked up another record profit. A2 Milk Co and Comvita fell.

The S&P/NZX 50 index gained 53.95 points, or 0.6 per cent, to 8657.33. Within the index, 37 stocks rose, six fell and seven were unchanged. Turnover was $128 million.

Goodman Property rose 2.2 per cent to $1.41. The real estate investor’s joint venture with Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC sold seven Auckland CBD buildings to US private equity firm Blackstone for $635m, meaning the NZX-listed property trust will reap $323.9m.

“They had an unsolicite­d approach from an offshore buyer, sold at a passing yield of 6.6 per cent, which given the office property is on leasehold land, and one would certainly expect another round of land rental increases to come through, appears to be a great sale for Goodmans,” said Matt Goodson, managing director at Salt Funds Management. “The market hasn’t missed that.”

Ryman gained 2.5 per cent to $11.52. The Christchur­ch-based retirement home operator and developer lifted annual underlying earnings 14 per cent to $203.5m and said it anticipate­s more growth with 16 villages in the pipeline.

Goodson said Ryman always reports a “very steady solid degree of underlying profit growth” and while new sales fell short of expectatio­ns, resales were “a little bit stronger”.

Rival operator Summerset Group rose 2.9 per cent to $7.22, while Metlifecar­e declined 0.3 per cent to $5.94.

Heartland Bank led the benchmark index higher, rising 2.9 per cent to $1.78. The lender said it expects annual earnings to be at the top of guidance after its third-quarter profit rose 11 per cent on continued lending growth. A2 dropped 4 per cent to $11.30, rounding out a 13 per cent slump for the week. The milk marketer missed expectatio­ns, prompting some analysts to reassess what have been optimistic assumption­s for the company’s outlook.

Honey products exporter Comvita fell 1.9 per cent to $6.77. Z Energy dropped 0.7 per cent to $7.50 after rival ExxonMobil NZ reported a 57 per cent rise in annual profit for 2017 on a 22 per cent gain in revenue.

Among the blue chip stocks, Auckland Internatio­nal Airport rose 2.4 per cent to $6.75, Fletcher Building gained 0.8 per cent to $6.49, Meridian Energy increased 1.3 per cent to $3.04 and Spark New Zealand advanced 1.4 per cent to $3.54.

Outside the benchmark index, ERoad climbed 5.9 per cent to $3.80 after beating annual earnings guidance and reporting a small profit.

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