Other financial stocks to gain include ANZ Group - which will report on November 13 and rose 0.8 per cent to $28.14 - and Heartland Group Holdings, which holds its annual meeting on Thursday, rising 3.1 per cent to $1.66. ASX-listed National Australia Bank, the parent of Bank of NZ, reports on Thursday.
Smith said competition is still very intense with mortgages in both Australia and NZ.
While central banks around the world appear to be done raising interest rates, Australia’s central bank is expected to raise the target cash rate by 25 basis points on Tuesday.
Smith said the new Australian governor has a low tolerance for a slow return to bring the pace of inflation back to target, and markets are pricing in a 66 per cent chance of a rate hike on Melbourne Cup day.
“A 25-basis-point rise is odds-on favourite.”
Among NZ-listed companies with Australian exposures, Fletcher Building rose 1.6 per cent to $4.52, SkyCity Entertainment was up 2.7 per cent at $1.94 and KMD Brands advanced 3.5 per cent to 90 cents.
Travel software firm Serko led the local benchmark index higher, rising 4.9 per cent to $4.25 as a clutch of tech companies also rallied on Monday, with Pacific Edge up 4 per cent at 10.4 cents, Vista Group advancing 3.9 per cent to $1.35 and Fisher & Paykel Healthcare climbing 3.4 per cent to $22.65.
Blis Technologies posted the biggest gain on the main board, up 15 per cent at 2.3 cents in light trading, while Rua Bioscience advanced 9.2 per cent to 13 cents, and PaySauce increased 5 per cent to 21 cents.
Mainfreight posted the biggest decline on the main index, falling 5.7 per cent to $57.50 ahead of reporting its first-half result on Thursday.
Smith said the logistics company was under pressure from shipping liner Maersk’s grim quarterly earnings report on Friday, when it said it would cut 10,000 jobs – almost 10 per cent of its workforce – as the pandemic-fuelled cargo boom subsided.
“They control one-sixth of global container trade and they’re seen as an economic bellwether,” he said.
Move Logistics also fell, down 4.8 per cent at 59 cents.
Metro Performance Glass, which spurned a takeover bid from its major shareholders in July, posted the biggest decline on the main board, falling 10.3 per cent to 13 cents in relatively light trading.
Just four companies traded on volumes of more than a million shares, with Arvida Group unchanged at $1.15, Air NZ falling 0.7 per cent to 67.5 cents, Spark NZ rising 1 per cent to $5.06 and Auckland International Airport advancing 1.6 per cent to $7.86.