The New Zealand Herald

Contact, Meridian drops prick bubble

- Graham Skellern

Further selling in Contact Energy and Meridian on the New Zealand sharemarke­t outweighed sharp gains in stocks benefiting from the introducti­on of a transtasma­n travel bubble.

There was heavy trading in the leading energy renewable stocks as the offshore exchange trade funds rebalanced their weightings in the S&P Global Clean Energy Index.

This resulted in the S&P/NZX 50 Index falling 87.82 points or 0.7 per cent to 12,400.48 on volume of 97.6 million share transactio­ns worth $207.54. There were 74 gainers and 63 decliners over the whole market.

Contact fell 29c or 4.1 per cent to $6.79 with 7.3m of its shares worth $49.8m changing hands, and Meridian was down 33c or 5.91 per cent to $5.25 with 9.1m shares worth $47.7m being traded.

Contact said it had bought all the shares in Western Energy Services, a specialist geothermal well service operator based in Taupo¯.

Confirmati­on that quarantine-free travel between New Zealand and Australia would begin on April 19 boosted the travel and tourism stocks.

Air New Zealand, which will be flying the Tasman more regularly, climbed 10c or 5.8 per cent to $1.825;

Auckland Internatio­nal Airport was also up 10c to $7.75; Tourism Holdings surged 15c or 5.84 per cent to $2.72; Millennium & Copthorne Hotels NZ increased 17c or 7.46 per cent to $2.45; and online travel provider Serko gained 4c to $6.99.

Millennium told the market it was pulling out of the deal to buy central Whangarei land from the local district council.

Greg Smith, head of research for Fat Prophets, said there had been a fair bit of anticipati­on about the transtasma­n travel bubble. The bubble would provide a material boost to the travel and tourism stocks.

“This will be good for tourism industry overall,” said Smith.

Fletcher Building rose 20c or 2.86 per cent to $7.19, while Skellerup Holdings increased 10c or 2.35 per cent to $4.36; and cinema software firm Vista Group gained 5c or 2.36 per cent to $2.17.

Amongst other energy stocks, Mercury fell 25c or 2.36 per cent to $6.25; Trustpower was down 5c to $8.30; and Genesis lipped 2.5c to $3.47.

Market leader Fisher and Paykel Healthcare declined 40c to $31.33, and Mainfreigh­t was down $1.39 or 2.02 per cent to $67.50. Restaurant Brands fell 21c or 1.6 per cent to $12.91, Pushpay Holdings declined 4c or 1.95 per cent to $2.01; and Delegat Group shed 20c to $14.40.

Apple exporter Scales Corporatio­n fell 10c or 2.15 per cent to $4.55; personal lender Harmoney was down 8c or 3.56 per cent to $2.17; and AFT Pharmaceut­icals declined 8c or 1.83 per cent to $4.30.

Telecommun­ications network company Chorus slumped 19c or 2.73 per cent to $6.76 after effectivel­y downgradin­g its earnings. Chorus told the market it has lowered its revenue estimate for regulated fibre services from $715m-$755m to $680m-$710m a year to December 2024.

Synlait Milk recovered another 9c or 2.59 per cent to $3.56; while a2 Milk was down 6c to $8.36.

Transport software firm EROAD rose 17c or 3.82 per cent to $4.62; manuka honey producer Comvita was up 7c or 2.24 per cent to $3.19; kiwifruit grower and packer Seeka increased 17c or 3.48 per cent to $5.06;

Scott Technology gained 8c or 3.98 per cent to $2.09.

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