The New Zealand Herald

Shares surge on tech sector optimism

Vaccine hopes add fuel to US-inspired flurry of buying

- — BusinessDe­sk

New Zealand shares jumped on growing optimism among investors that US tech companies will deliver strong earnings in the current earnings season and that potential Covid19 vaccine trials are showing promise.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index gained 183.57 points, or 1.6 per cent, to 11,736.73. Within the index, 27 stocks rose, 15 fell, and eight were unchanged. Turnover was $153.1 million.

Asian markets took their cue from the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index hitting a new record as vaccine data was released and investors looked towards US earnings season. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was up 2.3 per cent in late trading while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 1.8 per cent.

The rush to buy was driven by corporate reporting in the US, where investors are hopeful technology companies will continue to lift earnings despite the pandemic.

“It’s all about tech and highmultip­le stocks being aggressive­ly chased once more in that US market,” said Matthew Goodson, director of Salt Funds Management.

Because the NZX has a limited number of technology stocks, upbeat investor sentiment translated into generalise­d buying across the board, he said.

Meanwhile, optimism that a Covid19 vaccine may be on the horizon after promising data from trials of three candidates also supported buying, but wasn’t the only factor for local investors.

Goodson said some stocks set to benefit from a vaccine weren’t outperform­ing, while others that have benefited from the virus, such as Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, were among the leaders. A2 Milk rose 3.3 per cent to $21.21,

F&P Healthcare gained 2.7 per cent at $36.74, Infratil increased 2.8 per cent to $4.92 and Genesis Energy was up 3.2 per cent to $3.03.

Those heavyweigh­t stocks drove yesterday’s gains, while virus sensitive stocks were mixed. Auckland Internatio­nal Airport

rose 3.7 per cent to $6.44 and Air New

Zealand advanced 2.7 per cent at $1.33, both outperform­ing the broader market. Meanwhile, Vista Group In

ternationa­l increased just 1.6 per cent to $1.27 and Tourism Holdings was unchanged at $1.78.

“This is more a liquidity-driven rally as opposed to a news-driven rally,” Goodson said.

“Exceptiona­lly low central bank interest rate policies are forcing investors up the risk curve into equities.” Kathmandu Holdings led the market higher, rising 4.5 per cent to $1.16 and SkyCity Entertainm­ent

Group rose 4.1 per cent to $2.54. Tech stock Pushpay Holdings rose 1.8 per cent to $7.81. Telecommun­ications firm Spark

New Zealand was up 1.7 per cent to $4.84 and internet infrastruc­ture provider Chorus fell 2.1 per cent to $7.31.

Fishery firm Sanford posted the day’s biggest decline, dropping 2.9 per cent to $6.35.

Outside the NZX 50 benchmark,

PGG Wrightson fell 2.7 per cent to $2.91 after it said it would report operating earnings between $24m and $25m for the June year. That was in line with the previous year, though down from its $30m guidance that was subsequent­ly withdrawn due to the pandemic.

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