NZ sharemarket down after wobbly trading day

The New Zealand sharemarket continued to drift following a volatile earnings season while offshore bourses climbed to new highs.

Monday, March 4th 2024, 6:30PM

by BusinessDesk

The S&P/NZX 50 Index traded in a narrow range of 11,695.68 and 11,746.02 before closing at 11,724.21, down 20.18 points or 0.17%.

There were 76 gainers and 67 decliners over the whole market on volumes of 49.63 million share transactions worth $138.75m. Precinct Properties, up 1c to $1.19, topped the individual trading list with 16.9m shares worth $20.15m changing hands. 

Jeremy Sullivan, investment advisor with Hamilton Hindin Greene, said the Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 indices in the United States are sitting at record highs.

“Expectations of a soft economic landing and interest rate cuts and interest in artificial intelligence stocks have seen their markets climb higher. The moves have not translated to the NZ market and broader investor sentiment is based offshore.”

Sullivan said there are several local stocks, particularly in the retirement village sector, trading at discounts to net tangible assets and “we may well see investors hunting around and picking up undervalued stocks". 

"We have a restrictive interest rate environment and this is holding back asset values.”

On Wall Street, the S&P 500 gained 0.8% to 5137.08 points and Nasdaq Composite increased 1.14% to 16,274.94 over the weekend (NZ time).

The Dow Jones was close to its recent high of 39,131.53 points, gaining 0.23% to 39,087.38. The US markets have risen seven out of the past eight weeks, and 16 out of the last 18 weeks – not seen since the early 1970s.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Index and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 hit record highs on Friday and the Nikkei climbed further, having gained 0.38% to 40,063.06 points at 6pm NZ time.

The ASX 200 was down 0.17% to 7732.5 points at the same time. There were hardly any major moves on the quiet local market. Fletcher Building was down 8c or 1.91% to $4.11.

Fletcher’s chair Bruce Hassall has now stepped down and Barbara Chapman is the acting chair. She will not seek the permanent role and will lead a recruitment process for the new chairperson. 

Sullivan said Chapman is well-regarded and knows the business well. 

“To say ‘it’s not for me’ indicates the level of risk and complexity associated with the role (of chair). But people have been calling for a change at the top for some time now.” 

Retirement village stocks Ryman Healthcare was up 6c to $4.59, and Oceania Healthcare, trading at a 57% discount to net tangible assets, gained 2c or 3.39% to 61c.

In the interest rate-sensitive property sector, Vital Healthcare Trust was down 9c or 4.28% to $2.015; Investore declined 4c or 3.64% to $1.06; and Kiwi decreased 1.5c or 1.79% to 82.5c.

Fisher and Paykel Healthcare was down 28c to $24.44; Gentrack shed 20c or 2.53% to $7.71; Restaurant Brands declined 9c or 2.78% to $3.15; Seeka fell 14c or 5.02% to $2.65; and Winton Land decreased 8c or 3.25% to $2.38.

Consumer-related stocks Steel & Tube was up 2c or 1.79% to $1.14; Bremworth was down 3c or 6.25% to 45c; Burger Fuel declined 1.5c or 4.92% to 29c; and 2 Cheap Cars shed 4c or 5.06% to 75c.

Mercury Energy was up 10c to $6.97; Colonial Motor Company added 12c to $8.32; Green Cross Health improved 2c or 1.79% to $1.14; and Channel Infrastructure gained 4c or 2.78% to $1.48.

NZME was up 2c or 2.04% to $1; Michael Hill gained 2c or 2.7 % to 76c; Synlait Milk rebounded 2c or 2.67% to 77c; and Ventia Services increased 4c to a new high of $4.08.

AFT Pharmaceuticals was down 5c to $3.19 after telling the market it has formed a partnership with United States-based manufacturer Microsize for the long-term supply of active pharmaceutical ingredients for Maxigesic Rapid pain relief medicine. 

Software firm Black Pearl Group gained 2.5c or 5.49% to 48c after reporting more than $1m in new annual recurring revenue in February, bringing the total to more than $7m. 

Recruitment firm Accordant Group, down 3c or 3.41% to 85c, told the market that revenue to date was down 9% and full-year net profit will be lower than the $2m reported in the previous year as government contracting and job ads had declined.

Tags: Market Close

« NZ sharemarket has quieter day after yesterday's swingsRebound in property stocks helps lift NZ sharemarket »

Special Offers

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Sign In to add your comment

www.GoodReturns.co.nz

© Copyright 1997-2024 Tarawera Publishing Ltd. All Rights Reserved