He said other international economic developments this week will affect the New Zealand market. The Australian Reserve Bank, US Federal Reserve and Bank of England are all meeting, and it's likely to be more of the same – interest rates rising.
"The technology stocks have finished reporting in the US but there are still lots of big companies to come and markets will take leads from them, whether they are good or bad reports."
About 80 per cent of S&P 500 companies have beaten quarterly earnings expectations in the current reporting season, but on the troubled Nasdaq Composite big tech companies Amazon, Apple and Intel fell on reports of slowing growth. Amazon was down 14.05 per cent to US$2485.63 ($3866.87), its biggest drop since 2006.
It sent the Nasdaq down 4.17 per cent to a new 2022 low of 12,334.64 points and the index fell 13.3 per cent in April – its worst monthly performance since October 2008 during the global financial crisis.
Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 2.77 per cent to 32,977.21 points, and S&P 500 fell 3.63 per cent to 4131.93. The Nasdaq is nearly 25 per cent below its all-time high, S&P 500 down 14.3 per cent and Dow Jones 10.8 per cent lower.
The Australian S&P/ASX 200 had fallen 1.26 per cent to 7341.1 points at 6pm NZ time.
Many of the established New Zealand stocks were weaker. Fisher and Paykel Healthcare was down 15c to $21.35; Ebos Group declined 55c to $41.85; Chorus decreased 14c or 1.9 per cent to $7.21; Ryman Healthcare shed 15c to $9.06; and Freightways was down 30c or 2.44 per cent to $11.98.
Skellerup Holdings declined 21c or 3.67 per cent to $5.51; Restaurant Brands was down 23c to $12.60; The Warehouse Group shed 11c or 3.19 per cent to $3.34; Heartland Group Holdings decreased 4c to $2.26; and a2 Milk continued its slide, down 11c or 2.24 per cent to $4.81.
Sky Network Television was down 6c or 2.24 per cent to $2.62; Scott Technology fell 13c or 4.22 per cent to $2.95; Michael Hill International declined 5c or 4 per cent to $1.20; DGL Group shed 15c or 3.52 per cent to $4.11; and Bremworth decreased 6c or 7.94 per cent to 58c.
Mercury has completed the $467m purchase of Trustpower's retail business and will double its customer electricity, gas, fixed and wireless broadband and mobile phone connections to 787,000. Mercury, unchanged at $6.06, also launched $200m worth of capital bonds with the ability to accept $50m over-subscriptions.
Trustpower, 51 per cent owned by Infratil, will change its name to Manawa Energy on Thursday and concentrate on power generation. Trustpower's share price gained 16c or 2.37 per cent to $6.90, and Infratil was down 5.5c to $8.345.
Amongst the few gainers, Marsden Maritime Holdings increased 15c or 2.5 per cent to $6.15; Hallenstein Glasson gained 6c to $6.08; T&G Global was up 5c to $2.95; and Eroad improved 6c or 1.91 per cent to $3.20.
Vital Healthcare Property Trust, down 8.5c or 2.72 per cent to $3.035, completed its 1 for 8.54 entitlement offer, raising $109.8m representing 37.2m new units. Eligible institutional unit-holders took up 98 per cent of their entitlements.
Amongst other property companies, Stride fell 8c or 4.04 per cent to $1.90; Precinct Properties was down 4.5c or 2.96 per cent to $1.475; Investore declined 3c or 1.8 per cent to $1.64; and Argosy gained 2c to $1.325.
Fletcher Building, down 1c to $6.18, has appointed Phillip Boylen as the new chief executive of Fletcher Construction Company. Boylen, who joined in 2019, was responsible for Brian Perry Civil and Higgins representing 70 per cent of the construction operations.