Across the Tasman, the S&P/ASX 200 Index had risen 0.47 per cent to 7343.6 points at 6pm NZ time.
So far, just over half of the S&P 500 companies have reported first quarter earnings and nearly 80 per cent of them have surpassed market expectations. The earnings are on track to fall 3.7 per cent for the first quarter, well below the 6.7 per cent decline projected beforehand.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, up 0.8 per cent to 34,098.16 points on Friday, had its best monthly stretch since January after gaining 2.5 per cent in April.
At home, Hallenstein Glasson added a further 18c or 2.88 per cent to $6.43 after reaching an intraday high of $6.60 and has now risen nearly 10 per cent in two trading days.
Hallenstein Glasson reported a robust first half result, and the stock is tipped to replace Pushpay Holdings in the NZX top 50.
Fisher and Paykel Healthcare was down 27c to $27.53; Ebos Group declined 30c to $44; Freightways shed 22c or 2.32 per cent to $9.28; a2 Milk was down 5c to $5.85; and Synlait decreased 4c or 2.48 per cent to $1.57.
Vulcan Steel fell 14c to $8.52; SkyCity Entertainment was down 4c to $2.36; Task Group declined 2.5c or 6.02 per cent to 39c; and Embark Education decreased 2c or 3.17 per cent to 61c.
In the energy sector, Mercury was up 5.5c to $6.395; Genesis increased 4c to $2.75; Vector gained 4c to $4.01; and Meridian decreased 4c to $5.42.
Other decliners were Millennium & Copthorne Hotels NZ falling 9c or 4.31 per cent to $2; Winton Land down 4c or 2 per cent to $1.96; and Carbon Fund decreasing 5c or 2.6 per cent to $1.87.
Fletcher Building was up 11c or 2.44 per cent to $4.61; Mainfreight collected 45c to $72.15; Skellerup Holdings increased 9c or 1.84 per cent to $4.97; Ryman Healthcare added 7c to $5.37, and Smartpay Holdings rose 9c or 5.81 per cent to $1.64.
Property for Industry was up 5c or 2.17 per cent to $2.35; NZME gained 3c or 2.83 per cent to $1.09; Rakon added 2c or 1.94 per cent to $1.05; and CDL Investments improved 1.5c to 1.94 per cent to 79c.
Steel & Tube gained 2c or 1.94 per cent to $1.05; Move Logistics increased 3c or 3.26 per cent to 95c; Black Pearl Group improved 4.5c or 13.43 per cent to 38c; and WasteCo Group gained 1c or 16.67 per cent to 7c.
Vista Group, up 2c to $1.25, has signed existing client Everyman Media Group to Vista Cloud. Everyman, listed on the London Stock Exchange, operates 40 cinemas with more than 130 screens.
MHM Automation was up 2c or 2.2 per cent to 92c after telling the market it had settled the purchase of Christchurch-based Wyma Engineering for $60m. Wyma managing director Andrew Barclay becomes a major shareholder with 22.9 per cent and joins the MHM board.
Asset Plus was up 0.005c or 2.04 per cent to 25c after the sale of its Auckland Stoddard Rd property was settled. Asset Plus has repaid $36.35m to BNZ with the overall banking facility reducing by $33m to $52m, and drawn debt is now $37.3m as it completes its Albany Munroe Lane development.
Apple exporter Scales Corp, down 1c to $3.14, has announced a full-year 2022 final dividend of 9.5c a share payable on July 7.
AFT Pharmaceuticals, down 4c to $3.36, told the market it will receive a response from the US Food and Drug Administration about its Maxigesic IV registration in mid-October. The medicine treats post-operative pain.
Cannasouth, unchanged at 29c, has launched a $9m capital raise at 29c a share, with an equal opportunity for Cannasouth and Eqalis shareholders under their merger. The entitlement is one new Cannasouth share for every 9.53075 held.