The New Zealand Herald

NZ sharemarke­t has second small gain

- Graham Skellern

The New Zealand sharemarke­t had a small gain for the second day running. And stock prices, in most cases, are consolidat­ing despite the lowest consumer confidence since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index increased 26.93 points or 0.22 per cent to 12,204.69 after reaching an intraday low of 12,142.87. The index has now declined nearly 6.4 per cent after falling 9.3 per cent earlier this month.

There were 65 gainers and 71decliner­s over the whole market on a steady trading day of 37.48 million share transactio­ns worth $155.88m.

The Westpac McDermott Miller

Consumer Confidence Index fell 7 points in March to 92.1 due to rising prices and Omicron concerns.

Greg Smith, head of retail with Devon Funds Management, said: “Oil, food prices — in fact everything — have gone up and people are coming off low mortgage rates. Ironically, investor sentiment is quite positive . . . and we’ve seen a lot of companies’ share prices under pressure.

“There’s now a contrast between consumer and investor sentiment, and the forward-looking sharemarke­t has already priced in a lot of the bad news this year,” said Smith.

Wall Street was weaker overnight as the Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell indicated the central bank could be more aggressive in lifting interest rates. The 10 Year US Treasury Note yield rose from 2.14 per cent to 2.24 per cent, and crude oil was back up to nearly $US113 a barrel.

At home, The Warehouse Group rose 13c or 4.39 per cent to $3.09 after telling the market that Christmas and summer trading was strong with record second quarter sales — up 2.8 per cent compared with the previous correspond­ing period and up 11.2 per cent from the pre-Covid 2020 period.

Its share price started the year at $4.07 and reached a low of $2.88 on March 15, falling nearly 30 per cent.

Hallenstei­n Glasson rose 15c or 2.36 per cent to $6.50. All eyes are now on KMD Brands (formerly Kathmandu Holdings) which is reporting its latest financial result.

Ebos Group climbed 99c or 2.58 per cent to $39.30; Fletcher Building was up 9c to $6.49; Auckland Internatio­nal Airport gained 11.5c to $7.73; and Contact Energy rose 13c to $8. Meridian was down 11.5c or 2.23 per cent to $5.035.

Retirement village operators

Ryman Healthcare increased 10c to $9.85, while Summerset Group Holdings fell 17c to $11.61.

Skellerup Holdings rebounded a further 5c to $5.89; Infratil posted 13c to $8.05; Scales Corporatio­n was up 14c or 2.82 per cent to $5.10; Eroad rose 22c or 6.06 per cent to $3.85;

Harmoney collected 6c or 4.17 per cent to $1.50; and DGL Group gained 7c or 2.22 per cent to $3.22.

Vital Healthcare Property Trust increased 6c or 1.86 per cent to $3.28;

My Food Bag recovered 2c or 2.72 per cent to 92c; and Fonterra Shareholde­rs’ Fund was up 6c to $3.54.

Mainfreigh­t was down $1.39 to $79.01; Port of Tauranga lost 7c to $6.03; a2 Milk declined 8c to $5.77;

Synlait decreased 7c or 2.06 per cent to $3.33; and Millennium & Copthorne Hotels New Zealand was down 6c or 2.53 per cent to $2.31.

Sky Network Television was down 2c to $2.67. Sky TV is lifting its Sport package price by $3 to $34.99 a month from May after securing English Premier League soccer.

Insurer Tower, down 1c to 70c, said the cost of claims from the Tongan volcanic eruption and tsunami is expected to reach $7.6m before tax.

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