New Zealand shares rose, led by Chorus, after the Commerce Commission lifted the amount the network operator can charge on its regulated copper lines. Spark New Zealand fell on the regulator's decision.
The NZX 50 Index edged up 0.413 points, or 0.01 percent, to 5430.035. Within the index, 24 stocks rose, 19 fell and seven were unchanged. Turnover was $146 million.
In a draft determination issued this morning, the competition watchdog effectively lifted prices Chorus, the regulated telecommunications network operator, can charge for access to the traditional copper lines network for broadband internet services by $3.95 a month to $38.39, from the $34.44 monthly regulated price that came into effect on Dec. 1.
Chorus advanced 17 percent to $2.51, the highest it's been since the Commission first revealed its cut copper prices last October. In the past, the network provider has claimed regulated copper service price cuts left a $1 billion hole in funding for the ultra-fast broadband. Chorus expects the draft new rates, will still knock an $80 million hole in annual operating earnings, but was better than the $170 million dent earlier flagged.
"It's the tale of something being taken with one hand and given to someone else with another," said Paul Harrison, managing director at Salt Funds Management. For Chorus "it was the confirmation that the Commerce Commission has understood the difficulties that Chorus faces and also the logic around the arguments. The market has taken heart that it's a positive and there should be some kind of resolution for them."