Stride told the market that property valuations stabilised during the second half of the financial year. Fellow property stock Argosy gained 2c or 1.87 per cent to $1.09.
Goodman Property Trust declined 6.5c or 2.95 per cent to $2.14 on full-year revenue of $244.1m, up 14.2 per cent, and a net loss of $564.9m, including one-off costs of $275.5m for taking its business in-house and valuation reduction of 9.5 per cent.
Goodman reported operating earnings of $121.4m, up 9.3 per cent, and said market rents for prime industrial space have increased.
Fisher and Paykel Healthcare and Meridian Energy, the two largest local stocks on market capitalisation, led the market down, declining 39c to $27.66 and 11c or 1.75 per cent to $6.17 respectively.
Spark, heading the individual trading list, declined 7.5c or 1.8 per cent to $4.10 on trade worth $15.6m. Auckland International Airport shed 15c or 1.94 per cent to $7.58.
Online travel provider Serko declined 7c or 2.24 per cent to $3.05 after reporting a 48 per cent increase in full-year revenue to $71.18m and net loss of $15.88m, a 49 per cent improvement from the previous year.
Serko’s total spending of $83.9m was below the guidance of $86m-$90m, and it is expecting revenue of $85m-$92m for the 2025 financial year.
Completed room nights on Booking.com for Business increased 65 per cent to 2.5m and active customers through the platform lifted 10 per cent to 172,000.
Summerset Group fell 39c or 3.87 per cent to $9.69 and Ryman Healthcare declined 11c or 2.88 per cent to $3.71.
Fellow retirement village operator Arvida Group gained 1c to 97c after reporting an 11 per cent increase in revenue to $247.16m and a 69 per cent rise in net profit to $139.36m for the 12 months ending March.
Gross value of sales was 13 per cent higher at a record $427m despite a soft housing market, and Arvida delivered 201 new units, including 144 villas. It is planning to build 140-150 new homes over the present financial year.
Jeremy Sullivan, investment adviser with Hamilton Hindin Greene, said there was a large discrepancy between Arvida’s NTA ($2.05 a share) and its share price. “Investors are starting to see some value in the retirement village sector.”
Other decliners were Comvita shedding 4c or 2.16 per cent to $1.81; Winton Land down 6c or 2.86 per cent to $2.04; T&G Global decreasing 4c or 2.29 per cent to $1.71; and AFT Pharmaceuticals falling 12c or 3.91 per cent to $2.95.
Insurer Tower gained 2.5c or 3.14 per cent to 82c after staging a strong turnaround in the six months ending March with an 18 per cent increase in revenue to $273.54m and net profit of $36.03m compared with a $5.1m loss in the previous corresponding period.
Gross written premiums increased 20 per cent to $291m and large events costs were $1.9m compared with $37.3m in the previous period. At the end of May, Tower had closed 97 per cent of Auckland Anniversary flooding and Cyclone Gabrielle claims.
Sullivan said Tower has benefitted from a net increase in premiums and a period of stability for large event claims.
Mainfreight collected $1.50 or 2.26 per cent to $68; Gentrack was up 13c to $9.98; Millennium & Copthorne Hotels NZ increased 9c or 4.89 per cent to $1.93; Eroad improved 2c or 2.11 per cent to $97; and Just Life gained 2c or 9.52 per cent to 23c.
CDL Investments was up 1.5c or 2.24 per cent to 68.5c after holding its annual meeting which approved an increase in total director fees to $300,000, from $180,000.