"Australia is still reacting to their budget. That's certainly not helping their market and also weaker resource prices as well are knocking a number of their stocks around," said Grant Williamson, director at Hamilton Hindin Greene "If they're not performing well then it is going to have some effect on our markets."
Trade Me fell 1.9 percent to $3.65 with over $44 million of the stock changing hands after an analyst downgraded the auction website operator to "sell", Williamson said. It is rated an average of "hold" according to 10 analysts surveyed by Reuters, with a median price target of $4.28.
Fletcher Building declined 0.3 percent to a three-month low of $9.10, extending its slide since the government said it will remove duties on imported building supplies and anti-dumping levies in a bid to bring down construction costs.
Precinct Properties New Zealand declined 1.4 percent, or 1.5 cents, to $1.055 as it shed rights to its interim dividend of 10.8 cents.
Goodman Property Trust fell 0.5 percent to $1.04 after its manager, Goodman (NZ), had its credit rating of BBB reaffirmed by Standard & Poor's. The trust's $295 million and $600 million senior secured bank debt was upgraded one notch to BBB+.
Fisher & Paykel Healthcare fell 0.2 percent to $4.30. The breathing apparatus manufacturer is due to report its full-year earnings this week and the market has "high expectations", Williamson said.
Argosy Property fell 1.1 to 94.5 cents. The property trust reports its full-year financials tomorrow, but Williamson didn't expect the results to move the stock significantly.
Telecom was unchanged at $2.73. Xero, the cloud-based accounting software company, advanced 0.6 percent to $32.40.
Ryman Healthcare gained 0.6 percent to $8.70. Summerset Group Holdings lifted 0.6 percent to $3.57. Metlifecare slipped 0.2 percent to $4.24.
OceanaGold Corp was the worst performer on the day, dropping 6 percent to $2.84.
Outside the benchmark index, Wellington Drive Technologies was unchanged at 14 cents after it said it had raised $2.2 million from shareholders in a convertible notes issue with a $5 million target. Shareholders would vote next month whether cornerstone
shareholder and underwriter SuperLife could mop up the remaining $2.8 million.
Dual-listed Goodman Fielder was unchanged at 74 cents, and had gained 3.3 percent to 68.7 Australian cents on the ASX. The board of the Australian food maker has backed an A$1.37 million takeover offer from two Asian food manufacturers.