New Zealand shares fell, led by Xero, joining a worldwide sell-off as investors fretted over stalling global growth. Fletcher Building, Kathmandu Holdings declined as the local currency gained against its Australian counterpart.
The NZX 50 Index fell 30.852 points, or 0.6 percent, to 5132.02. Within the index, 34 shares fell, eight rose and eight were unchanged. Turnover was $145 million.
Overnight, Wall Street dropped as reports showed declines in US retail sales and producer prices fuelled concern about the pace of the global economy. Last week, the International Monetary Fund cut its global growth forecast for 2015 to 3.8 percent from 4 percent and warned geopolitical tensions posed a risk to "frothy" equity markets. Markets across Asia retreated, with Japan's Nikkei 225 Index falling 1.8 percent in afternoon trading, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index declining 0.6 percent, and Australia's S&P/ASX 500 Index down 0.6 percent.
"The main theme is global growth fears have re-emerged," said Matthew Goodson, managing director at Salt Funds Management. "The evidence for that is fairly spotty, just several different monthly data points out of Germany and the US. We shall have to wait and see whether those fears are actually realised or not. The problem for markets is that they're at unusually high valuation levels so it doesn't take a great deal of bad news or perceived worry to upset that."
Xero, the cloud-based accounting software firm, fell 4.5 percent to a 13-month low of $16.96. The stock has declined some 63 percent from its March peak of $45.99 in part due to a global selloff as investors questioned high valuations relative to earnings of tech companies. The Wellington-based company wants a million customers, and is targeting growth in the US market where so far it has some 22,000 of its total 371,000 customers from.