The New Zealand Herald

Jittery index ignores solid Z Energy result

Mainfreigh­t pushes above $76 as F&P drags market lower

- Graham Skellern

Service station operator Z Energy got the latest local reporting season under way with a solid profit and price rise, but a shaky New Zealand sharemarke­t ignored that and fell more than half a per cent.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index was down 96.63 points or 0.75 per cent to 12,751.67. The index has fallen 3 per cent this year, while overseas markets have risen 7 per cent.

There were 53 gainers and 82 decliners over the whole market on steady volume of 57.85 million share transactio­ns worth $188.51 million.

Mark Lister, head of private wealth research with Craigs Investment Partners, said the local market is having a difficult ride and continuing to lag overseas markets.

“There is nervousnes­s about higher interest rates and inflationa­ry pressures, and the Fonterra capital restructur­e could have been disruptive for the broader market,” he said.

Overnight, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen clarified her interest rates comment, saying she’s not predicting or recommendi­ng rate hikes and there isn’t an inflationa­ry problem. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose to a new high, increasing 0.29 per cent to 34,230.34.

Z Energy rose 9c or 3.38 per cent to $2.75 after striking a 165 per cent increase in net profit to $57m for the 12 months ending March, turning around a loss of $88m in the previous year. Cost savings totalled $49m.

Revenue was down 29 per cent to $3.52 billion, with total marketing volume falling 22 per cent to 3.08 billion litres, mainly involving jet, bitumen and marine fuel. Z Energy is paying a final dividend of 14c a share on June 2, and its 2022 full-year operating earnings (ebitdaf) guidance is $270m-$310m, compared with $238m in the past year.

Lister said Z Energy has made reasonable progress but it still has a way to go. “Its share price has been so beaten up over a long period (since late March last year) and it doesn’t take much for people to get excited about the latest result. But Z Energy’s earnings still don’t look shining year on year.”

The big cap stocks continue to drag the market down. Fisher & Paykel Healthcare was down 75c or 2.17 per cent to $33.80 on trade worth $28m, after reaching $36.46 last week.

Auckland Internatio­nal Airport fell 17.5c or 2.26 per cent to $7.57; a2 Milk slipped a further 26c or 3.26 per cent to $7.72; Chorus declined 11c to $6.65; Ebos Group fell 50c to $30.20; and Fletcher Building decreased 13c or 1.75 per cent to $7.28. Synlait Milk fell 8c or 2.3 per cent to $3.40.

Lister said a2 Milk was in the firing line with investors worried about another earnings downgrade and the possibilit­y of it falling out of the MSCI global index.

The shining light was Mainfreigh­t which burst through the $76 mark, rising $1.10 to $76.40. Lister said “Mainfreigh­t really goes from strength to strength, it’s been amazing.”

Other gainers were Ryman Healthcare, up 25c or 1.77 per cent to $14.35; Scott Technology gaining 5c or 1.96 to $2.60; NZME up 3c or 4.05 per cent to 77c; and Rakon also picking up 3c or 3.26 per cent to 95c.

Re-opening stocks were knocked around. SkyCity Entertainm­ent fell 12c or 3.31 per cent to $3.50 after presenting in Australia the day before; Vista Group shed 4c to $2.46; and Serko was down 10c to $6.65. But Tourism Holdings rose 4c to $2.65.

Property for Industry has bought a 3.64ha industrial site in Wiri for $91.68m, and its share price edged ahead 2.5c to $2.88. The property company expects to pay cash dividends of at least 7.9c a share for its 2021 financial year.

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Z Energy rose 9c or 3.38 per cent to $2.75 after posting a 165 per cent rise in net profit.
Photo / Dean Purcell Z Energy rose 9c or 3.38 per cent to $2.75 after posting a 165 per cent rise in net profit.

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