The New Zealand Herald

Slight gain as index takes a breather

Trading cools after hot month driven by solid results

- Graham Skellern

Sanford and Mainfreigh­t retreated from their lofty peaks as the New Zealand sharemarke­t entered a consolidat­ion phase after a strong August.

After a sharp rise in the last half hour, the S&P/NZX 50 Index had a gain of 36.98 points or 0.28 per cent to 13,280.47, hitting an intraday low of 13,193.01.

There were 83 gainers and 50 decliners over the whole market on volume of 87.26 million share transactio­ns worth $185.39 million.

During August the index rose 4.96 per cent — the best month since November last year and for the first time since February it pushed back into positive territory with a year-todate rise of 1 per cent.

But the local market was still well behind those offshore, the Australian ASX up more than 13 per cent yearto-date and the Americans more than 20 per cent. Overnight, the Nasdaq Composite set a new record of 15,309.38 points, up 0.33 per cent, and Apple was at a high of US$152.51 ($215.90).

Mark Lister, head of private wealth research at Craig Investment Partners, said the local market is taking a breather after a cracker month of August, and it happened despite being in lockdown for half of it.

“The good thing is the market was driven on fundamenta­ls by betterthan-expected . . . earnings results. The sharemarke­t was doing its job and went up for the right reason.”

Lister said September was traditiona­lly the worst month of the year for the market.

“There’s not a lot happening out there and you’ll find the market is cautious, will consolidat­e and trade sideways until there’s some new direction.”

Mainfreigh­t, falling $2.01 or 2.04 per cent to $96.51 and Sanford shedding 31c or 5.74 per cent to $5.09, dragged the local market down. South Island iwi organisati­on Ngai Tahu Holdings told the market it has now taken a 19.9 per cent cornerston­e shareholdi­ng in the seafood company.

Market leader Fisher & Paykel Healthcare rose 59c or 1.8 per cent to $33.40; Contact Energy increased 12c to $8.30; Chorus picked up 9c to $7.18; Fletcher Building gained 6c to $7.43; and Summerset Group Holdings collected 11c to $15.40.

Synlait was up 10c or 3.1 per cent to $3.33, and a2 Milk gained 11c or 1.85 per cent to $6.05.

Lister said a2 Milk was a tough call. “All the signs from its latest result point to ongoing uncertaint­y but a2 Milk’s share price has fallen a long way and arguably it is getting into territory that represents long-term value.” Carbon Fund gained another 5c or 2.66 per cent to $1.93; and

Marlin Global fund rose 6c or 3.92 per cent to $1.59. My Food Bag collected 2c to $1.41.

Other gainers were Move Logistics, rising 9c or 5.59 per cent to $1.70;

Pacific Edge, up 3c or 2.16 per cent to $1.42; NZME increasing 2c or 2.04 per cent to $1; Evolve Education picking up 2c or 2.99 per cent to 69c;

Accordant Group adding 3c or 1.85 per cent to $1.65; and Green Cross Health up 4c or 3.6 per cent to $1.15.

Blue chips Ebos Group fell 56c to $35.44 on profit-taking; Auckland Internatio­nal Airport decreased 5c to $7.18; and Port of Tauranga was down 4c to $7.35. Delegat Group continued to fall, down 10c to $14;

Vital Healthcare declined 15c or 4.53 per cent to $3.16; and DGL Group lost 11c to $4.44.

Refining NZ increased 3c or 3.23 per cent to 96c now that it has its three customers and distributo­rs, BP, Mobil and Z Energy, onboard for its switch from being a refinery to a fuel import terminal.

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Plexure Group rose 6c or 11.11 per cent to 601c after completing a A$15m ($15.6m) institutio­nal placement for 30m shares at A50c (52c) a share. The additional A$5m shareholde­r offer will now be underwritt­en.

 ??  ?? Refining NZ rose 3c to 96c with its three customers and distributo­rs, BP, Mobil and Z Energy, confirmed for its switch from fuel refinery to import terminal.
Refining NZ rose 3c to 96c with its three customers and distributo­rs, BP, Mobil and Z Energy, confirmed for its switch from fuel refinery to import terminal.

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