Video | Agriculture | Confidence | Economy | Energy | Employment | Finance | Media | Property | RBNZ | Science | SOEs | Tax | Technology | Telecoms | Tourism | Transport | Search

 


MARKET CLOSE: NZ shares gain as Xero surge continues

MARKET CLOSE: NZ shares gain as Xero surge continues

Oct. 16 (BusinessDesk) – New Zealand stocks gained again, led by accounting software global pretender Xero and supported by Fletcher Building reaffirming profit expectations for this year, with a little upside.

The NZX50 Index of leading stocks rose 10.846 points, or 0.228 percent to 4,758.771. Within the index, 19 stocks rose, 19 fell and 12 were unchanged. Turnover was $110 million.

Xero led the pack, putting on7.4 percent to close at a new high of $22.10, having only pushed through the $20 mark yesterday, taking its market capitalisation to $2.6 billion, just pipping the $2.59 billion market cap of Auckland network operator Vector, to be the seventh largest NZX-listed stock by market capitalisation.

The run-up from $17.95 last week follows the $180 million capital-raising announced for Xero this week, involving long term US heavyweight tech sector investors, and supported by some New Zealand money, including $16 million from KiwiSaver provider Milford Asset Management.

“They’ve got a runway in terms of the money,” said James Lee, head of institutional equities at First NZ Capital in Auckland. “There’s just an increased belief that it’s possible they can do what they’ve set out to do.”

The company has around 211,000 customers for its cloud accountancy package and is seeking a million customers globally as it competes with other global and regional providers, such as MYOB. Xero shares have risen 313.1 percent in the last year.

Fletcher Building shares rose 1.4 percent to $9.53 after shareholders were told at the annual meeting in Auckland that forecast earnings in the current financial year, before interest and tax, would come in between $610 million and $650 million, with no improvement in Australia and weak trading compounded by a strong kiwi dollar.

“They reaffirmed their goals,” said Lee.

With its share price falling precipitously in recent days, Diligent Board Member Services, the governance software purveyor suffering governance problems of its own, has provided Accident Compensation Corp’s fund managers a buying opportunity. A substantial security holder notice for Diligent shows ACC has taken its stake from 7.4 percent to 8.5 percent. Diligent shares stabilised at $4.18, up 0.7 percent on the day, but have fallen from $5.65 on Oct. 10.

Elsewhere, retail and aviation stocks appeared to perform better than traditional blue-chips today, with continued weakness in the price of electricity company shares. Michael Hill International was the second strongest gainer, up 2 percent to $1.50, and Auckland International Airport up 0.9 percent to $3.36.

Contact Energy, the largest listed electricity generator-retailer, was the biggest loser on the day, down 2.3 percent at $5.20 after yesterday’s annual meeting gave no news on capital returns ahead of next week’s Meridian Energy partial privatisation.

“You’ve got the Meridian float sitting over the market,” said Lee, referring to next week’s institutional bookbuild for the Meridian float. “Everyone wants to get that done as cheaply as possible, so that’s going to weigh on the sector.”

Added to that was concern at the potential switch to a central buyer electricity policy if a Labour-Green coalition government emerges next year, cutting electricity company profits.

“You’re just not seeing any confidence in that sector.”

New Zealand Oil & Gas fell 1.8 percent to 82.5 cents as investors continue to ignore its low-cost acquisition of an increased share of the Tui oil field and a preliminary hydrocarbon discovery in Indonesia last week.

(BusinessDesk)

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 

More/Less Coal: Consents Granted For Coal Mine At Mangatangi

A joint Waikato District Council and Waikato Regional Council hearings committee has approved the issuing of consents to a Fonterra subsidiary for an open cast coal mine at Mangatangi, 2.5 kilometres east of Mangatawhiri, in north Waikato. More>>

ALSO:

Disasterous Year: ICNZ Warns Country Must Adapt To Extreme Weather Events

The cost of insured damage from extreme weather events for 2013 is likely to be over $100 million, making it the most costly year from storms in New Zealand since 2004, according to the Insurance Council of New Zealand. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: Christchurch Airport Targeting Excessive Profits - Regulator

Christchurch International Airport’s proposed prices over the next two decades are significantly higher than the Commerce Commissions’ view of what’s acceptable, and tougher disclosure requirements have had little impact on promoting price efficiency, the regulator says. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: Xero Raises $180M Selling Shares At Premium To Matrix, Thiel

Xero, the cloud-based accounting company whose shares have more than doubled this year, raised $180 million selling shares to Matrix Capital Management, Peter Thiel-backed Valar Ventures and other investors to ensure it can keep bankrolling its expansion. More>>

ALSO:

Thermal Field Management: Geyser’s Revival Of International Significance

Revival of Papakura Geyser in Rotorua’s Whakarewarewa geothermal valley may be a world first, Bay of Plenty Regional Council Chief Executive Mary-Anne Macleod says. More>>

ALSO:

200 Jobs At Stake: Independent Fisheries To Consider Future Of Christchurch Plant

Intense competition from heavily discounted foreign-sourced product in its key markets has forced Christchurch-based fishing company Independent Fisheries Ltd to consider the future of its Woolston processing facilities. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: SFO Confirms Probe Into Auckland Transport Procurement

The white-collar crime investigator executed a number of search warrants at several locations yesterday as it probes an unidentified number of individuals relating to “irregularities in the procurement of services,” it said in a statement. More>>

ALSO:

Get More From Scoop

 
THE WESTPORT STORY
Told by Scoop

Scoop Amplifier paid a 3-day visit to Westport and the Buller District to begin to gain some on-the-spot perspectives into just how steep a battle the majority of Coasters are facing to find ways to tell the story of their intertwined environmental and economic prospects.

See:


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Business
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news