The New Zealand Herald

Shares fall as strong kiwi hits exporters

F&P and a2 lead index lower while Sky TV jumps 8.8%

- — BusinessDe­sk

New Zealand shares fell as a strong kiwi dollar weighed on export heavyweigh­ts Fisher & Paykel Healthcare and a2 Milk, pushing the market lower and giving back much of yesterday’s gains.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index dropped 225.47 points, or 2 per cent, to 11,298.69. Within the index, 29 fell, 17 stocks rose, and four were unchanged. Turnover was $264.3 million. The local benchmark was off the pace as stock markets across Asia followed Wall Street, where the Nasdaq hit an all-time high on optimism about the global recovery. That has helped push the kiwi dollar to a five-month high as investors return to risk-sensitive assets.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index gained 2.8 per cent in afternoon trading, catching up after Monday’s Queen’s Birthday public holiday there.

“Fisher & Paykel and a2 Milk are doing most of the damage,” said Grant Davies, an investment adviser at Hamilton Hindin Greene.

The two big exporters were the initial drag that turned the market, along with a number of property and yield stocks, he said.

F&P Healthcare led the market lower, falling 5.7 per cent to $28.30.

A2 Milk dropped 4 per cent to $19.01. The kiwi dollar has been on an upward trajectory since it bottomed out in March at a 10-year low. Since then, it’s put on more than 10 US cents, trading around 65 US cents. That reduces the value of exports for the likes of F&P Healthcare and a2, which both generate large amounts of revenue in US dollars. US-based donation company

Pushpay also declined, down 0.6 per cent at $7.

Property stocks were weaker. Precinct Properties New Zealand declined 2.3 per cent to $1.71, Property for Industry fell 3.1 per cent to $2.38, Goodman Property Trust dropped 2 per cent to $2.23 and Kiwi Property

Group decreased 2.2 per cent to $1.145. NZX fell 1.4 per cent to $1.46 with 11.7 million shares traded. The bulk of that was in a single trade of 11.4 million shares at $1.40.

Spark New Zealand declined 2.1 per cent to $4.39 with 6.2 million shares traded. Auckland Internatio­nal Airport

fell 3.6 per cent to $6.95, more than offsetting yesterday’s 2.7 per cent gain.

Still, the positive mood continued for some of the worst-affected companies which continued to recover with investors happy to take on risk. Sky Network Television posted the day’s biggest gain, rising 8.8 per cent to 18.5 cents. Air New Zealand rose

8.4 per cent to $1.94 and SkyCity

Entertainm­ent Group increased 5.7 per cent to $3.14. Refining NZ advanced 3.3 per cent to 95 cents and Z Energy rose 1.3 per cent to $3.15. Infratil yesterday announced it would raise up to $300m of new equity to help advance its growth plans and allow it to snap up opportunit­ies through the recession. The infrastruc­ture investment firm will offer new shares at $4.76, an 8 per cent discount on the $5.175 price the stock closed at on Monday. The stock is now on a trading halt.

Davies said Infratil was taking advantage of the recovery to build a war chest for its existing developmen­t pipeline.

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