The market is pricing in a 46 per cent chance the Reserve Bank will reduce interest rates at its Monetary Policy Statement on June 11, after the central bank signalled in late April that interest rate hikes were off the table and it was watching conditions that could prompt a cut. Traders bought equities with stable dividends as they sought income-paying investments in a low interest rate environment.
SkyCity, the casino operator, advanced 1.7 per cent to $4.15. Meridian, the government-controlled energy generator and retailer, gained 1.5 per cent to $2.435. Fletcher Building, the construction and building supplies firm, rose 0.1 per cent to $8.50. Freightways, the courier and logistics service, climbed 1.5 per cent to $6.19. Air New Zealand, the national carrier, rose 1.1 per cent to $2.81.
"The outlook for interest rates still looks to be down so that could add fuel to the fire eventually, but at the moment investors seem to just be sitting on their hands," said Grant Williamson, director at Hamilton Hindin Greene, who said New Zealand's relatively high-yielding market bourse was supporting the market in quiet trading.
"There's no real catalyst at the moment to buy stocks. Investors seem to be a little bit reluctant to hop in and buy at the moment."
Heartland rose 0.8 per cent to $1.34. Last week, the listed bank saw nearly 9 per cent of its stock traded after Quadrant Private Equity put in a block order for its holding, via brokerage First NZ Capital offering the shares at $1.30.
"There is still quite solid demand for that stock today," Williamson said. "That block sale was digested very quickly by the market." Spark fell 0.7 per cent to $1.39. The telecommunications provider is in the middle of a business transformation away from its bread-and-butter landline income to become a data, cloud and content provider, launching a streaming video service, Lightbox, to compete.
"Analysts may have pegged back future prospects and investors are starting to wonder where the earnings growth is going to come from with Spark," Williamson said.
"The income investors were buying the stock pretty aggressively but now investors are starting to consider where growth is going to come from."
Coats Group, formerly the Guinness Peat Group, rose 3.8 per cent to 55c.
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group, the dual-listed Australian bank, was the worst performer on the benchmark index, down 1.1 per cent to $34.11.