With about a week of trading left in 2013, Xero is the best performer by a clear margin. It has soared 323 per cent and the gains quickened in October, when the cloud-based accounting services firm raised enough cash from high profile US technology investors to bankroll its growth strategy.
Diligent Board Member Services almost kept pace with Xero in the first half of the year, helping drive NZ's own tech boom before being sunk by governance issues and the need to restate revenue, and ending the year down about 35 per cent.
They were joined by mobile advertising company Snakk Media in March, website search operator SLI Systems in May, intelligence software firm Wynyard Group on July and GeoOp, which sells software to SMEs to manage workers, in October. As year-end looms, only Wynyard is showing gains.
MightyRiverPower has fallen 21 per cent from its issue price, making it one of the year's biggest disappointments.
The Key Government's first asset sale was spiked by the announcement by the opposition Labour Party and Greens a week before the sale closed in May that they would scrap the nation's existing wholesale electricity market and replace it with a new government agency which would act as a central buyer, planner and regulator for the industry to bring power prices down for households.
While dismissed by some market participants, the threat of regulation continued to resonate.
Meridian Energy's instalment receipts recently traded at 99.5 cents, just below their issue price in October after a smaller-than-expected pool of investors participated in the IPO.
Chorus has dropped 49 per cent as the network operator hopes the Government will push back against regulated price cuts ordered to start in December. Gas and electricity lines company Vector is heading for a 4.4 per cent annual decline.
"Anything that has potential chance of being regulated has had a big question mark over it," Tyndall's Ward said.
Fletcher Building, the biggest company on the exchange, has managed only a 1.8 per cent gain in a year when the Government began an inquiry into the high cost of building and it struggled to build earnings in Australia. Telecom is up just 2 per cent.
Units of Fonterra Shareholders' Fund have dropped 18 per cent in 2013 and plumbed their lows this month. Despite the whey protein contamination scare Fonterra faced in August, the units suffered more after Fonterra slashed its dividend payments.
Synlait Milk provided a more straightforward play on dairy prices when it IPO'd in June at $2.20 andthen beat its prospectus guidance for earnings. The stock is up 44 per cent this year. A2 Corp, once sneered at for marketing milk with a protein variant said to have health benefits, has gained 42 per cent after overhauling its marketing into Australia, the UK and Asia.
The sharemarket rally allowed Australian buyout firm Quadrant Private Equity to exit its holding in retirement village operator Summerset Group in two steps this year.
Investors who participated have come out ahead as Quadrant sold the first 40 million shares at $2.42 in March and the remaining 50 million in October at $3.10. The shares were last at $3.24 and have climbed 42 per cent this year. It has helped catering for the elderly is increasingly understood to be a Ryman Healthcare, the biggest of the three listed retirement village operators, is one of the year's biggest gainers, rising 73 per cent. Metlifecare, whose former owners sold out to Infratil and the NZ Superannuation Fund in October, has gained 29 per cent.
Sky Network Television has gained about 18 per cent and investors who participated in News Corp's sale of its 44 per cent stake at $4.80 apiece in March are among the year's winners, with the stock recently trading at $5.74.
Mark Lister, head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment Partners, is upbeat about 2014 in the face of the election and rising borrowing costs, saying companies may achieve earnings growth of 10 per cent and a dividend yield of 6 percent in average. He doubts there will be a repeat of the past two years' gains though.
Despite boom times for equities, Kiwis are still wary of the stockmarket, keeping $120 billion in short-term deposits paying interest of 4 or 5 per cent.BusinessDesk