The New Zealand Herald

Index resilient as Wall St tumbles

Budget cash may have provided buffer, says analyst

- Graham Skellern

The New Zealand sharemarke­t, on Budget Day, once again proved resilient to the gyrations on Wall Street, which had its biggest single-day slide in nearly two years.

While leading United States indices tumbled more than 4 per cent, the S&P/NZX 50 Index finished down 51.34 points or 0.46 per cent to 11,206.93 after making a strong recovery during the afternoon as the Budget details unfolded. The index reached an intraday low of 11,070.38 points.

There were 100 decliners and 38 gainers across the main board on light trading of 44.59 million shares worth $112.87 million.

Mark Lister, head of private wealth research with Craigs Investment Partners, said New Zealand’s defensive market held up well to the sharp selloff on Wall Street.

“A fall of less than half per cent . . . I’d take that any day of the week. We are dominated by stable companies in utilities, healthcare and infrastruc­ture rather than the high-growth and technology stocks, and we don’t feel the brunt of the selling around the world.

“Maybe the Budget played a role with lots of money flying around. Whether it’s a wise use of taxpayers’ money, it does stimulate the economy,” Lister said.

The Budget included a $1 billion cost of living support package.

After US retailer Target reported lower-than-expected first quarter earnings, following Walmart’s slip the day before, the indices turned nasty. Nasdaq Composite fell 4.73 per cent to 11,418.15 points; S&P 500 declined 4.04 per cent to 3923.68; and Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 3.57 per cent to 31,490.07.

At home, utilities investor Infratil provided a bright light with a record annual result. Infratil increased 20c or 2.53 per cent to $8.10 after reporting a big increase in net profit to $1.23b on revenue of $1.88b, up 36.9 per cent, for the year ending March.

It was Infratil’s biggest result since it started in 1994 and reflected the $1b profit from the sale of its stake in Tilt Renewables. It is paying a final dividend of 12c a share on June 15.

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare was down 46c or 2.19 per cent to $20.59;

Fletcher Building declined 11c or 1.86 per cent to $5.80; Freightway­s shed 20c or 1.82 per cent to $10.80;

Restaurant Brands fell 40c or 3.36 per cent to $11.50; and The Ware

house Group was down 19c or 5.51per cent to $3.26. Goodman Property Trust was up 5c or 2.4 per cent to $2.13 after reporting record annual net profit of $763.8m, up 17.7 per cent. Heartland Group Holdings, down 4c to $2.20,

announced the appointmen­t of Chris Flood as deputy group chief executive and Leanne Lazarus will be moving from Westpac Life to become the Heartland Bank chief executive from August 1.

Seeka fell 22c or 4.33 per cent to $4.86 after telling the market its SunGold kiwifruit crop was lower than expected. Seeka has packed 26 million trays, 8.2 per cent below its estimate, though it was ahead of the 17.9 million trays packed last year. The total New Zealand SunGold crop is estimated at 103.3 million trays, down 9.7 per cent on the forecast.

Sanford gained 1c to $4.35 after reporting a 55.5 per cent fall in net

profit to $6.12m on revenue of $270.92m, up 16 per cent, for six months ending March. Operating earnings (ebit) improved 79.4 per cent to $19.2m.

Chatham Rock Phosphate rose 2.5c or 7.14 per cent to 37.5c on news it is now involved with two studies — one to scope a phosphate/fertiliser export facility at the Port of Townsville, and the other an evaluation by Australian Commonweal­th Scientific and Industrial Research Organisati­on on the potential to extract rare earth elements from its Korella mine.

Chatham’s share price has climbed from 12.2c this year and has risen 152 per cent over the past 12 months.

 ?? ?? Seeka fell 22c or 4.33 per cent to $4.86.
Seeka fell 22c or 4.33 per cent to $4.86.

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