"The market is digesting today's result, and you're probably still seeing analysts quietly cutting their forecasts," he said.
Tourism Holdings led the market, up 5.8 per cent at $4.77 on higher than average volumes of 455,000. The rental RV operator is bouncing back from a 17-month low and was upgraded to 'neutral' from 'underperform' today by First NZ Capital, which said the stock is trading at a discount to its fundamental value.
Gentrack Group rose 3.3 per cent to $4.70 on typically light volumes of 59,000, recovering recent losses when it downgraded earnings guidance. Fellow software firm Pushpay was also up, rising 4.7 per cent to $3.36.
Solly said earnings season was consistent with slowing growth not just domestically but around the world.
"We've still got a degree of growth, but just like everybody else in the world that degree of growth is slowing," he said. "Our market is reasonably fully-priced - it needs earnings to keep going and to remain positive to support it."
Fonterra Shareholders' Fund units sank 7.3 per cent to a record low close of $4.17 on a volume of 711,000, almost twice the average. Fonterra won't pay an interim dividend after downgrading its forecast earnings, while raising the farmgate milk price it expects to pay suppliers.
"It's disappointing, but it's obvious Fonterra is for the cooperative farmers - that's what the group is there to protect," Solly said.
Power companies rose after the Electricity Authority found there wasn't an undesirable trading situation in the wholesale market late last year when electricity prices spiked. Meridian Energy rose 1.1 per cent to $3.69 on a volume of 3.8 million shares, Contact Energy gained 0.8 per cent to $6.33 on a volume of 3.3 million, Genesis Energy increased 0.7 per cent to $2.80 on a volume of 916,000, and Mercury NZ was up 3.7 per cent at $3.69 on a volume of 818,000.
Spark New Zealand was the most traded stock, with a volume of 12.2 million, compared to its 4.3 million average. It rose 0.7 per cent to $3.73. Sky Network Television dropped 2 per cent to $1.46 on a volume of 3 million, almost six times its average.
Of other stocks trading on volumes of more than a million shares, Fletcher Building was unchanged at $4.89, Auckland International Airport rose 0.9 per cent to $7.77, Precinct Properties New Zealand advanced 0.3 per cent to $1.50, A2 Milk fell 2 per cent to $14.31, and Fisher & Paykel Healthcare gained 2.6 per cent at $14.70.
Solly said the MSCI index changes affected Auckland Airport, A2, Fletcher, F&P Healthcare, Meridian, Ryman Healthcare and Spark, but there were no new entries or exits. Ryman rose 0.8 per cent to $11.
Vista Group International decreased 0.2 per cent to $4.50 after announcing chief financial officer Rodney Hyde is leaving the cinema software firm to join another Kiwi tech firm.
Outside the benchmark index, Methven was unchanged at $1.62 after reporting a 7.9 per cent increase in underlying earnings on strong performances in the UK and China. The tapware maker is poised to leave the NZX in April with shareholders to vote on a $118m takeover offer.