The New Zealand Herald

Shares rise on prospect of Fed rate cut

Property stocks and utilities push up but more Fonterra woes

-

New Zealand shares rose as the prospect of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates underpinne­d demand for companies offering reliable income such as utilities, infrastruc­ture firms and property investors. Fonterra shares and fund units dropped.

The S&P/NZX 50 index increased 13.85 points, or 0.1 per cent, to 10,558.28. Within the index, 25 stocks rose, 18 fell and seven were unchanged. Turnover was $147 million, of which Pushpay Holdings accounted for $61.9 million.

Stocks offering better returns from dividends than those available from bank deposits and bonds continued to attract support after US economic data overnight raised expectatio­ns for the Fed to cut interest rates.

Rickey Ward, New Zealand equity manager at JBWere, said if the Fed cuts interest rates, that adds pressure to other central banks to follow suit to avoid the impact on their currencies and following inflationa­ry effects.

“Property stocks have had an unbelievab­le run, not on any brilliant news, but because they provide dividend yield and have a great degree of certainty around that,” he said. Mercury NZ rose 1 per cent to

$4.505, Genesis Energy increased

0.9 per cent to $3.43, Z Energy was up 1 per cent at $6.31, and Vector advanced 0.8 per cent to $3.82. Argosy Property rose 0.7 per cent to

$1.42, Meridian Energy increased 0.6 per cent to $4.70 and Chorus was up

0.6 per cent at $5.675.

Stride Property decreased 0.4 per cent to $2.24, and Precinct Properties New Zealand was up 0.3 per cent at $1.755.

Retirement village operators led the market higher, with Ryman Healthcare up 2.9 per cent at $12.27. Metlifecar­e increased 1.6 per cent to $4.44, Arvida Group rose 1.5 per cent to $1.38 and Summerset Group was up 1.3 per cent at $5.69.

Pushpay was the most traded stock once a halt was lifted, with 16.7 million shares changing hands, compared with its 523,000 average. Former chief executive Chris Heaslip sold 12.2 million shares in an underwritt­en bookbuild on Wednesday at a clearing price of $3.70.

The stock was halted for the bookbuild, and ended yesterday at $3.69, down 2.6 per cent.

Spark New Zealand fell 1 per cent to $3.95. A2 Milk decreased 0.8 per cent to

$14.95.

Ward said a recent analyst’s report suggested the company was going to over-deliver on investor expectatio­ns when it reports annual earnings in August.

Synlait Milk, which produces a2’s infant formula, rose 2.2 per cent to $9.25.

New Zealand’s dominant dairy company didn’t fare so well. Fonterra Co-operative Group’s

farmer-owned shares dropped 6.4 per cent to $3.51. Fonterra Shareholde­rs’ Fund units posted the biggest decline on the NZX50, down 5.3 per cent at $3.55.

Ward said a lot of investors have “washed their hands of Fonterra” over the way it subordinat­ed unitholder­s’ interests to those of the co-operative’s shareholde­rs, having promoted it as a reliable income stock when the fund was listed in 2012. Outside the benchmark index,

PGG Wrightson increased 1.9 per cent to 54c after issuing a notice of meeting where shareholde­rs will be asked to back a court-approved scheme of arrangemen­t to allow a 31c a share capital distributi­on.

Trustpower’s 2029 bond paying annual interest of 3.97 per cent was the most traded debt security on a volume of 961,000 notes.

It closed at a yield of 3.15 per cent, up 5 basis points. Trustpower shares increased 0.3 per cent to $7.45, for a dividend yield of 6.36 per cent.

 ??  ?? Mercury NZ rose 1 per cent yesterday, closing at $4.505.
Mercury NZ rose 1 per cent yesterday, closing at $4.505.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand