The New Zealand Herald

Xmas rally sparks another rising day

Markets respond after signs rapid rate rises could ease

- Graham Skellern

An obliging United States Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell sparked further rallies, the Dow Jones Industrial Average came out of the bear market, and the New Zealand sharemarke­t posted another impressive gain.

On this positive day some investors were wondering whether the traditiona­l Santa Claus rally is under way — after Powell said it was time to slow the interest rate rises.

The S&P/NZX 50 Index again performed strongly in the afternoon — led by Fisher & Paykel Healthcare and Ebos — and closed at 11,654.56, up 102.51 points or 0.89 per cent after a 1.38 per cent rise the day before.

There were 93 gainers and 40 decliners over the whole market on an improved value of 38.46 million share transactio­ns worth $168.17 million.

Powell said “it made sense to moderate the pace of our rate increases as we approach the level of restraint that will be sufficient to bring inflation down”.

Commentato­rs are now predicting a smaller 50 basis points increase after four consecutiv­e 75 basis points rise from the Fed’s meeting next month.

Dan Stratful, investment adviser with Forsyth Barr, said the local market was led by the buoyant night on Wall Street on the back of positive comments from Powell.

“For the Nasdaq Composite to be up more than 4 per cent is quite a daily jump. We’ve just had our mini reporting season wrapping up and we’ve seen some fairly reasonable results. The Christmas rally as I predicted has happened,” he said.

The technology-laden Nasdaq climbed 4.41 per cent to 11,468 points but is still down 26.7 per cent this year. The S&P 500 rose 3.09 per cent to 4080.11 and is down 14.39 per cent for the year.

The Dow Jones was up 2.18 per cent to 34,589.71 points and officially stepped out of the bear market. It needed to go over 34,470.61 points and is now 6 per cent away from its January 4 record close of 36,799.65.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index was up 0.9 per cent to 7349.7 points at 6pm NZ time.

At home, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare gained a further 72c or 3.05 per cent to $24.32 — its highest level since late March.

Ebos Group was up 37c to $41.32 on trade worth $44m, pushed by passive investment funds that track the MSCI indices needing to stock up.

Fletcher Building gained 12c or 2.42 per cent to $5.07; Genesis Energy increased 5.5c or 2.17 per cent to $2.59; and a2 Milk added 14c or 2.11 per cent to $6.79 on the eve of sister company Synlait’s annual meeting. Investors are hoping the meeting will provide an indication of a2 Milk’s sales progress. Synlait was up 11c or 3.61 per cent to $3.16.

Retirement village operators Summerset Group was up 15c to $9.50; Ryman Healthcare gained 5c to $6.70; and Oceania Healthcare increased 3c or 3.73 per cent to 84c.

Gentrack was again lively, rising 7c or 2.94 per cent to $2.45 and has climbed more than 40 per cent in three trading days. Air New Zealand was up 1.5c or 1.95 per cent to 78.5c on increasing business, carrying 1.25 million passengers in October compared with 340,000 for the same month last year and 1.37 million in 2019. Auckland Internatio­nal Airport gained 9.5c to $8.135.

Fast food operator Restaurant Brands gained 4c to $6.65 after announcing executive appointmen­ts. Arif Khan, who runs the New Zealand business, becomes the global chief and will also be the acting chief executive when Russel Creedy retires at the end of March. Julio Valdes has been appointed chief financial officer.

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Fisher & Paykel Healthcare helped deliver a second strong day on the NZ market.
Photo / Dean Purcell Fisher & Paykel Healthcare helped deliver a second strong day on the NZ market.

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