New Zealand Refining was the best performer, up 5 per cent to $2.73. The oil refiner today released its throughput and margin report for September and October, with a gross refining margin of US$7.49 per barrel and processing fee income of $52.5 million.
"The gross refining margin was very strong again, we have a pretty big upgrade to our profit numbers and that's a continuation of the positive news of late," Price said.
Heartland Bank rose 3.3 per cent to $1.57. It reported a 21 per cent increase in quarterly profit, reflecting growth in its loan book, and affirmed its guidance for 2017 earnings to rise as much as 11 per cent.
Stride Property Group gained 1.1 per cent to $1.83. The property investor, which manages 71 properties worth $2 billion, posted a 21 per cent gain in first-half earnings after restructuring its business.
Precinct Properties New Zealand was unchanged at $1.215. The company is upbeat about its tilt towards Auckland, where it sees downtown real estate underpinned by an expanding population, while in Wellington it prefers government tenancies over corporates, chief executive Scott Pritchard told shareholders at today's annual meeting in Auckland.
Outside the main index, Rakon dropped 15 per cent to 17 cents. The company posted a first-half loss, blaming a sluggish telecommunications network industry for lacklustre sales.
Steel & Tube Holdings gained 0.9 per cent to $2.32. Chief executive Dave Taylor says a "dramatic upswing" in coking coal prices and higher iron ore prices meant there needs to be a hike in domestic steel prices in New Zealand next year.
Veritas Investments was unchanged at 20 cents. Disgruntled shareholders fired a salvo of questions over poor performance and the tanking share price for the group, which includes the Mad Butcher, Nosh, and Better Bar Company brands, at today's annual meeting in Auckland. In August it reported a full-year loss of $4.6 million, compared with a $3.3 million profit the prior year.