New Zealand shares, led by Kathmandu Holdings after the retailer said annual earnings may slide 15 percent. Pacific Edge fell to an eight-month low. Serko debuted on the NZX while Hirepool withdrew its planned initial public offer.
The benchmark NZX 50 index slipped 4.959 points, or 0.1 percent, to 5121.205. Within the index, 23 stocks fell, 18 rose and nine were unchanged. Turnover was $121.3 million.
Kathmandu fell 12 percent to a two-month low of $3.15 after the outdoor apparel and equipment retailer said full-year earnings before interest and tax will probably fall by 10 to 15 percent in the 11 months ending June 30, as sales during the company's winter sales promotion were "significantly below expectations" in its main markets of Australia and New Zealand. Warmer weather crimps sales of its cold weather products such as down jackets, fleece and thermals.
"It's quite a warning, but Kathmandu does have a history of quite significant surprises on the upside and downside, which is driven by the nature of its sales-driven model," said Matthew Goodson, who helps manage $650 million of equities and property holdings for Salt Funds Management. "The great bulk of their earnings do occur in the three or so sales they have each year. Probably a not complete shock in some ways given the weather in Australia in particular had been very warm, but the market, prior to this had been perhaps ignoring this."
Xero rose 0.1 percent to $25.92, paring a decline after the stock market regulator issued a 'please explain' notice to Xero over a 22 percent slide in its share price since June 16 to an eight-month low of $23 at 11 am today. The Wellington-based cloud accounting software firm has "historically been subject to significant volatility as a result of its tightly held share price," and Xero complies with continuous disclosure rules, the company's chief financial officer Ross Jenkins said in a letter to the regulator.