"Next week is going to be interesting, especially with what happens in the Australian election," he said. "The focus will go onto the currency and what our cross-rate does."
Infratil shares were halted at $4.45 today for a $100m placement to institutional investors at $4 a share. The company is then going to raise $300m in a 1-for-7.46 rights issue to help fund its share of the $3.4 billion acquisition of Vodafone New Zealand. The new shares will also be entitled to the 11-cent final dividend declared as part of today's annual result.
McIntyre said the result had been well signalled and all attention was on the capital raising.
NZX led the market higher, up 1.9 per cent at $1.09 on a volume of 417,000 shares, more than its 90-day average of 269,000. Sky Network Television rose 1.7 per cent to $1.23 and Vector advanced 1.6 per cent to $3.76.
Spark New Zealand was the most traded stock on a volume of 4.2 million shares, less than its usual volume of 5.8 million. It increased by 0.4 per cent to $3.755.
Kiwi Property Group, which reports on Monday, rose 0.3 per cent to $1.535 on a volume of 1.4 million shares, while Goodman Property Trust, which reported this week, rose 0.3 per cent to $1.805 on a million units.
Auckland International Airport hit a record $8.625, ending the day at $8.57 on a volume of 1.1 million shares. The airport operator reported flat passenger numbers in March.
Restaurant Brands New Zealand posted the biggest decline on the day, down 3.6 per cent at $8.87 on a volume of 63,000 shares, less than half its 90-day average of 170,000. The fast-food operator's unionised workers will be striking this weekend.
Dual-listed Australia & New Zealand Banking Group dropped 3.1 per cent to $27.25. The Australian bank's local arm was today censured by the Reserve Bank and lost its accreditation to use an internal risk model to work out capital requirements.
Westpac Banking Corp was down 1.3 per cent at $26.80, while much smaller rival Heartland Group Holdings increased 0.6 per cent to $1.58.
SeaDragon was unchanged at 0.2 cents on a volume of 5.2 million shares after shareholders approved a series of resolutions to raise $4m via a convertible note from director Mark Stewart's Pescado unit. The funding line staved off the threat of liquidation for the time being.
PGG Wrightson was unchanged at 52 cents on a volume of 1.2 million shares, more than five times its 90-day average of 262,000.
Fonterra Cooperative Group's 2025 bonds paying annual interest of 4.15 per cent were the most traded debt security on a volume of 1.8 million. The notes closed at a yield of 3.18 per cent, down 1 basis point.
The Local Government Funding Agency's 2025 bonds paying 2.75 per cent traded at a yield of 2.15 per cent, down 1 basis point, on a volume of 1.2 million notes.