The New Zealand Herald

Pushpay, Fletcher lead gains

Broker says investors are looking at firms in tech sector as Xero moves off board

- — BusinessDe­sk

New Zealand shares rose in the first trading session of 2018, led higher by Pushpay Holdings and Fletcher Building.

The S&P/NZX50 Index gained 26.83 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 8424.91. Within the index, 27 stocks rose, 17 fell and six were unchanged. Turnover was $89.2 million.

“Volumes haven’t been too bad given a lot of institutio­ns and fund managers are still away on holiday, but the phones have been pretty quiet today,” said Grant Williamson, director at Hamilton Hindin Greene. “A lot of investors don’t have their minds on the market right now.”

was the best performer, up 4.3 per cent to $4.35. The mobile payments app company reached its target of US$100 million in annualised committed monthly revenue by Dec. 31, and reiterated it expects to break even on a monthly cash flow basis before the end of 2018.

“They had predicted what they were going to achieve, but the market has taken heart from the announceme­nt,” Williamson said. “With moving off the board, investors are looking at companies in the tech sector — obviously Pushpay is one, ERoad, Serko has done pretty well as well. You’ve seen movement up in a number of those stocks.”

gained 3.1 per cent to $3.69 in the day, while rose 5.5 per cent to $2.31. Neither stock is listed on the benchmark index. rose 2 per cent

rising

Pushpay Holdings ERoad Serko Fletcher Building Heartland Bank

to $7.75, with 1.9 per cent to $2.12.

Xero Auckland Internatio­nal Airport

rose 1.5 per cent to $6.58. It is still considerin­g its options for its 24.55 per cent stake in North Queensland Air- port and expects to give an update by next month. The airport said three options — to continue to hold the stake in the airport, to sell to one or more of the existing NQA shareholde­rs, or to sell to a third party in accordance with the security holders agreement — remain on the table, but it prefers to sell the asset.

SkyCity Entertainm­ent

was the worst performer, down 1.9 per cent to $4.07, while dropped 1.8 per cent to $14.09. Tapware designer

F&P Healthcare Methven

dropped 3.6 per cent to $1.06. It named Jannine Mountford as chief financial officer and company secretary, saying it was confident the former NZ Rugby and Fletcher Building executive would help drive long-term profitable growth.

 ?? Picture / Jason Oxenham ?? Auckland Airport rose as it said it is still considerin­g options for its North Queensland Airport stake.
Picture / Jason Oxenham Auckland Airport rose as it said it is still considerin­g options for its North Queensland Airport stake.

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