Otago Daily Times

Market commentary

- The New Zealand Herald

WELLINGTON: Energy stock prices remained muted after the announceme­nt that the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter will remain open for at least another two years, as investors pondered the impact of earnings and dividend yields on the affected companies.

Shane Solly, portfolio manager with Harbour Asset Management, said Contact and Meridian no doubt provided electricit­y pricing discounts for the smelter’s owner Rio Tinto to remain operating through to December 2024.

‘‘It is great news we have certainty, but the announceme­nt is not a surprise and there are costs associated with it that may affect earnings. It does, however, provide time to put the infrastruc­ture in place and get the electricit­y out of Southland.

‘‘If Contact and Meridian had not had such a strong run lately with the exchangetr­aded funds buying, then we may have seen a more positive response to the smelter developmen­t,’’ Mr Solly said.

‘‘But we do have a bit of water to run through the dam and see what it means on earnings and dividend.’’

The S&P/NZX 50 Index finished flat at 13,115.87, down 4.41 points or 0.03%, after a choppy day’s trading, underpinne­d by the uncertaint­y in the direction of the energy stocks. The index traded between a high of 13,206.88 points and a low of 13,091.30.

A total of 69.78 million shares worth $152.12 million were traded, and there were 86 gainers and 57 decliners over the whole market.

Meridian fluctuated between a high of $8.145 and a low of $7.83 during the day before closing up 4.5c to $7.94 on heavy trading of $20.7 million worth of shares.

Contact ranged between $10 and $9.57 before settling at $9.69, down 26c or 2.61% on trade worth $18.3 million. Mercury fell 20c or 2.74% to $7.110, and Genesis Energy, the least affected by the Tiwai Point developmen­t, rose 4c to $3.74. Vector was also up 5c to $4.28.

Late in the day news filtered through that Presidente­lect Joe Biden is plans to increase the economic stimulus package to $US2 trillion ($NZ2.8 trillion). Latest statistics in the United States showed inflation, at 1.4%, was not running as high as expected, and 10year government bond yields had stabilised, falling from 1.15% to 1.11%. These developmen­ts may spur Wall Street markets overnight.

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare made good progress, rising 35c to $32.20 on trade worth $13.34 million. Auckland Internatio­nal Airport was up 13c or 1.72% to $7.68, Serko increased 8c to $5.68 and Hallenstei­n Glasson continued climbing, gaining 38c or 5.48%, to $7.31.

The retirement village operators had another down day. Ryman Healthcare fell 30c or 1.99% to $14.75 and Summerset Group Holdings lost 15c to $12.20.

The property stocks fared better. Argosy, Precinct and Stride were all up 5c to $1.59, $1.71 and $2.39 respective­ly. Kiwi Property gained 1.5c to $1.22.

On a quiet day, Mainfreigh­t was down 70c to $65.10, Ebos Group fell 40c to $28.60, Freightway­s slipped 7c to $10.40, Skellerup Holdings decreased 5c to $3.80, The Warehouse Group declined 3c to $3.02, after a recent strong run, and Tourism Holdings lost a further 6c to $2.39.

NZX gained 7c to $2.16 and apple exporter Scales Corporatio­n climbed another 3c to $5.

Among the small caps, electronic manufactur­er Rakon rose 4c or 5.63 per cent to 75c and Evolve Education was up 2c to $1.34. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand