The New Zealand Herald

Local bourse does well to stay in black

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New Zealand shares were mixed, with A2 Milk Co bouncing after recent selling while Orion Health Group sank to a record low. The S&P/NZX 50 Index gained 10.86 points, or 0.1 per cent, to 8329.93. Within the index, 20 stocks fell, 19 stocks rose, and 11 were unchanged. Turnover was $104 million.

“It hasn’t been a bad day for the market, given what we saw from the US overnight [ Monday],” said Mark Lister, head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment Partners. “Local investors would be pleasantly surprised to be slightly in the green given it was another rough night on Wall Street. We started off on the back foot but we’ve certainly recovered throughout the day and we’re outperform­ing other markets.”

Leading gains yesterday was Mercury New Zealand, up 2.5 per cent to $3.30, with Meridian Energy rising 2.5 per cent to $2.952 and Port of Tauranga advancing 2.1 per cent to $4.89.

A2 Milk gained 0.6 per cent to $12.47. In a statement yesterday, the company said it hasn’t seen any change in growth in China and it’s confident in its business after the shares weakened on news that competitor­s have begun selling their own A2-branded infant formulas in China.

The stock dropped 6.5 per cent last Wednesday when Nestle confirmed it had launched an A2 product under its Illuma brand, with the product called Atwo and sold in China, and fell a further 4.2 per cent on Thursday.

“They started really on the back foot, earlier it was off a good 6 or 7 per cent, things have recovered though to be slightly in the green now,” Lister said. “The whole market recovered in the day and when the Australian market opened, the Aussies saw a bit of value in A2 at those levels.

“Ultimately we’ll have to wait and see whether any of those competitor­s gain a foothold and that impacts their market share, or whether their brand is strong enough to maintain that market position.”

The worst performer was Heartland Bank, down 2.8 per cent to $1.71, with Trade Me Group dropping 1.8 per cent to $4.35. Outside the benchmark index, Orion Health fell 8.6 per cent to 64 cents, a record low. The healthcare software developer missed guidance for annual sales due to delays in finalising some large deals and said it’s targeting annual savings of up to $30m in a “substantia­l” restructur­e of global operations. The Auckland-based company’s revenue was between $170m and $173m in the year ended March 31, missing already downgraded guidance of $175m to $190m, it said

“Obviously well, well below where the IPO was priced a few years back, they basically downgraded their revenue guidance after a few deals didn’t come through,” Lister said. “They were hoping to break even in the second half of this year, that’s not going to happen now.

“They’ll make a loss, not the worst loss they’ve made in recent years but a loss nonetheles­s. It has been a pretty rough few years for Orion and there doesn’t look to be anything positive on the horizon,” Lister said. “It does raise questions over whether they need to raise capital again, whether they’ve got enough money to keep going — certainly not if they keep going the way they are, and that’s the reason for the share price being down. It’s a real fall from grace which started a long time ago.”

Metro Performanc­e Glass 1.4 per cent to 75 cents.

It said its full-year normalised net profit was $18m to $18.5m on the back of weaker-than-expected Australian performanc­e as well as some unexpected costs related to a change in leadership.

“It’s not quite as dire a situation as you’re seeing with Orion, but still another bit of negative news from a company that has been a huge disappoint­ment,” Lister said. “It hasn’t been sold off too heavily, maybe the market wasn’t hugely surprised because they’ve got a track record of disappoint­ing.” rose — BusinessDe­sk

 ??  ?? Port of Tauranga was one of the decent performers, advancing 2.1 per cent.
Port of Tauranga was one of the decent performers, advancing 2.1 per cent.

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