New Zealand shares bounced back from yesterday's 1.5 per cent drop, led by Port of Tauranga and Scales Corporation while Comvita continued to fall.
The S&P/NZX50 Index rose 45.75 points, or 0.7 per cent, to 6,941.95. Within the index, 29 stocks rose, 12 were unchanged and nine fell. Turnover was $124.8 million.
"There's a little bit of a bounce - the market was obviously very weak yesterday, but it's made back about a third of that today, so maybe people are doing a bit of bargain hunting," said James Smalley, director at Hamilton Hindin Greene. "It's really broad-based but volumes aren't particularly massive. When foreign investors decide to reduce their weighting at the same time as domestic ones, you can get get relatively large movements on low volumes."
Port of Tauranga led the index, up 2.7 per cent to $3.75. Scales Corporation rose 2.4 per cent to $2.09, while Kathmandu Holdings gained 2 per cent to $2.01 and Meridian Energy was up 2 per cent to $2.60.
Comvita dropped 1 per cent to $9.35. The shares slumped 11.4 per cent yesterday after the manuka honey and health products maker warned a first-half loss was on the cards, which chief executive Scott Coulter described as a "blip".