Weekend Herald

Small gain for shares on big day for politics

- Graham Skellern

The NZ sharemarke­t closed the week with a small gain as the coalition agreement quelled some uncertaint­y. The S&P/NZX 50 Index moved into positive territory after policy changes and ministeria­l appointmen­ts were announced. The index finished on 11,211.22, up 23.69 points or 0.21 per cent.

The index ended the week slightly ahead at nearly 0.3 per cent — with just one down day — and has now fallen 2.4 per cent for the year. It has risen 4 per cent in November.

There were 68 gainers and 59 decliners over the whole market on volumes of 26.86 million share transactio­ns worth $78.45m.

Shane Solly, portfolio manager with Harbour Asset Management, said the market “didn’t get upset [with the coalition agreement] and sell off the NZ dollar and bonds.

“At first glance, the policy changes seem quite balanced and consistent with previous expectatio­n. They look to be positive for companies listed on the sharemarke­t as the Government is relaxing the employment conditions and providing a clear framework for infrastruc­ture.

“The cancellati­on of the Lake Onslow hydro scheme will take pressure off the electricit­y generators as the project was seen as a risk for them. The coalition is more supportive of the retirement sector, and the reintroduc­tion of interest deductibil­ity will likely attract or retain investors in the housing market,” Solly said.

“One surprise was the $1.2 billion regional developmen­t fund, that’s quite chunky, and there’s a shot across the bow of the Australian banks with a select committee inquiry into competitio­n and profitabil­ity.”

Solly said though the latest company results had been mixed, there was a whiff that earnings are starting to grow again after 12-24 months of downgrades.

“Some results have been better than expected as we see a gradual grind down of the economy and next week is big for reporting with Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, Ryman Healthcare and property companies Kiwi, Stride and Argosy.”

Mainfreigh­t gained 77c to $66.90; Skellerup added 8c to $5.18; Serko rose 21c or 5.02 per cent to $4.39;

Hallenstei­n Glasson gained 14c or 2.37 per cent to $6.05; and Fletcher Building was up 5c to $4.58.

Fletcher Building’s distributi­on chief executive Bruce McEwen has resigned and is leaving at the end of March. Solly said PlaceMaker­s was one of the better parts of the business and there were some big workboots to fill.

Among retirement stocks,

Oceania Healthcare increased 3c or 4.41 per cent to 71c; Arvida Group was up 2c or 1.9 per cent to $1.07;

Ryman Healthcare gained 5c to $5.40; and Summerset Group was down 10c to $9.55. Ebos Group continued to fall after pulling out of acquisitio­n talks, down 41c to $35.

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