The New Zealand Herald

Upbeat Mainfreigh­t hauls shares higher

Courier climbs 13.9% and dual-listed banks also leap up

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New Zealand shares were led higher by Mainfreigh­t after the logistics group’s earnings weathered the worst of the Covid-19 crisis at a time when investors grow more optimistic about the global economy reopening.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index rose 134.45 points, or 1.2 per cent, to 11,049.19. Within the index, 38 stocks rose, 10 fell and two were unchanged.

Mainfreigh­t led the market higher, up 13.9 per cent at $41 after keeping its final dividend unchanged and reporting a small lift in annual underlying earnings.

Sam Dickie, a senior portfolio manager at Fisher Funds, said Mainfreigh­t’s ability to weather the Covid crisis meant the firm would come out stronger than it went in. This put the logistics firm in a category with other winners such as a2 Milk and Fisher & Paykel Healthcare. A2 fell 1.4 per cent to $18.94 and

F&P Healthcare declined 0.6 per cent to $30.81.

Sam Trethewey, a portfolio manager at Milford Asset Management, said Mainfreigh­t’s earnings coincided with growing optimism from internatio­nal investors that the worst of the

economic crisis had passed.

The two dual-listed Australian banks also saw double-digit gains yesterday. The sector has lagged behind the broader market throughout the crisis as the spectre of debt defaults and another global financial crisis caused investors to steer clear. Australia & New Zealand Banking Group jumped 11.9 per cent to

$19.59 and Westpac Banking Corp rose 10.9 per cent to $19.19. Both companies are still down more than 24 per cent this year.

Trethewey said the financial sector had fallen and stayed down until it caught the attention of investors looking for the next opportunit­y.

This sudden rush on the financial sector was driven by a similar trend on Wall Street overnight where investors moved out of tech companies and into financial stocks. The S&P 500 rose 1.2 per cent overnight while the tech-heavy Nasdaq edged up just 0.2 per cent.

The Australian financial sector pulled the ASX into positive territory. The S&P/ASX 200 was trading up 0.4 per cent at 5pm in Wellington. Flet

cher Building rose 4.8 per cent to $3.43. Trethewey said this was another example of investors’ willingnes­s to take on risk, sensing opportunit­y in the harder hit stocks.

Air New Zealand increased 4.2 per cent to $1.375 and Auckland

Internatio­nal Airport advanced 3.5 per cent to $6.54, with speculatio­n that a transtasma­n bubble may arrive earlier than expected. Tourism

Holdings increased 0.7 per cent to $1.55, while SkyCity Entertainm­ent

Group fell 2.7 per cent to $2.50, posting the day’s biggest loss.

Z Energy gained 0.3 per cent at $2.94, as fuel volumes continue to recover and Refining NZ rose 1.4 per cent to 72 cents.

Courier company Freightway­s increased 0.7 per cent to $6.95.

Trustpower declined 2.2 per cent to $7.14. New Zealand’s fifth-largest energy retailer yesterday reported a 16 per cent drop in earnings to $186.5m for the March year. The company also trimmed its final dividend by 1.5 cents a share, holding back about $4.7m for extra flexibilit­y.

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