New Zealand shares gained, led higher by Gentrack Group and Port of Tauranga, with Westpac Banking Corp gaining on its first-half result.
The S&P/NZX50 Index rose 38.57 points, or 0.5 per cent, to 8,587.94. Within the index, 31 stocks rose, 10 were unchanged and nine fell. Turnover was $92.4 million.
“It’s a pretty solid day which isn’t surprising – it was a good day offshore on Friday night, this part of the world has caught up to those positive leads out of the US and so forth, which all came on the back of the strong reporting season,” said Mark Lister, head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment Partners.
“The market here is generally waiting around for the reporting season to get a bit busier, that will ramp up over the next couple of weeks, plus we’ve got the OCR and the Monetary Policy Statement this week from the Reserve Bank – people are watching that to see if the new governor means there’s a change in approach.”
Gentrack Group led the index higher, up 2.3 per cent to $7.20. The stock has jumped 10 per cent over the past fortnight, hitting a record high on May 2.
“It continues to get some good support, it has had a good run lately,” Lister said. “It has just quietly stitched together quite a few good offshore deals, and seems to be growing the business quite steadily and performing well.”
Port of Tauranga rose 2 per cent to $5.10, Trustpower gained 1.9 per cent to $5.84, and NZXadvanced 1.9 per cent to $1.08.
Dual-listed Westpac Banking Corp rose 1.3 per cent to $31.65. The bank’s New Zealand unit lifted first-half cash earnings 4 per cent to $482m as it fattened margins and cut costs with a transformation programme that’s introduced greater self-service and shut down several branches. Westpac’s New Zealand unit contributed around 10.4 per cent of the group’s A$4.25 billion ($4.55b) total cash earnings.
New Zealand regulators are putting local bank behaviour under greater scrutiny after the Royal Commission in Australia uncovered some dubious practices, with the Reserve Bank and Financial Markets Authority demanding local lenders demonstrate how their operations differ from their Australian parents.
“It wasn’t a bad result, you’d call that a win given how much pressure the sector has been under lately,” Lister said.