"You'd think there's a bit of value in the local market heading into the new year, given that December quarter was the ... first negative quarter in five quarters.
"Although we still ... look reasonably well priced, there's certainly more opportunity than three or four months ago."
Ryman Healthcare led the index, gaining 3.6 per cent to $8.40, while Auckland International Airport advanced 3.5 per cent to $6.47 and Fisher & Paykel Healthcare rose 2.9 per cent to $8.77. "Some of the blue chips are performing well; Auckland Airport, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare which is obviously a beneficiary of a weaker NZ dollar, the US dollar's still pretty strong so maybe that's giving it a little bit of support at the moment," Lister said.
"Spark's up, Port of Tauranga's up, they're keeping the market buoyant for the first day of the year."
Spark NZ gained 2.6 per cent to $3.50, while Port of Tauranga was up 2.6 per cent to $3.95.
Dual-listed ANZ gained 3.3 per cent to $32.69. The bank has agreed to sell its 20 per cent holding in Shanghai Rural Commercial Bank for $1.9 billion, or 9.19b yuan.
Comvita was the worst performer on the index, down 5 per cent to $7.63.
"It's quite a bit lower than where it peaked last year at almost $13, but I don't think there's much in that," Lister said.
"It's a smaller company that's not quite as liquid as some of the others. They've obviously had some challenges with the sales into China through some grey channels, that's been weakening off."
Stride Property dropped 2.3 per cent to $1.73, while Investore Property declined 0.7 per cent to $1.36.
"Property stocks are showing some weakness. I think that's probably a further unwinding of the yield trade taking place, interest rates moved up pretty sharply in the second half of 2016 and most people [feel] that will continue," Lister said.
"Some of these higher-yield sectors that don't offer much growth are getting sold off, and a few of the property stocks are weaker on the back of that ongoing dynamic."
Warehouse Group fell 2.1 per cent to $2.79. Lister said the retailer had seen some weakness after it issued a profit warning late last year.
Outside the benchmark index, Plexure Group dropped 6.3 per cent to 30 cents. The digital advertising firm, formerly known as VMob, says it has passed $10m in annualised committed monthly revenue after signing a new $1m contract with an undisclosed client. BusinessDesk