"A2's a marketing company, it's a company of momentum, and I think they've chosen her on the basis that she's able to keep that marketing going," McIntyre said. "She hasn't come from a commodity-based background, and that could work in their favour."
Restaurant Brands New Zealand gained 1 per cent to $7. It said third-quarter sales jumped 45 per cent, driven by the contribution from Taco Bell and Pizza Hut outlets acquired in Hawaii, Guam and Saipan in March and from additional KFC stores in Australia. Sales rose to $173.3m in the 12 weeks ended December 4, from $119m a year earlier.
"That company is performing well, and that's probably leading into a pretty reasonable full year result," McIntyre said.
"The acquisitions they've made have been well planned and executed, they've been earnings accretive. They've been able to maintain a pretty good rate of momentum, I think that's going to carry on for the next 12 to 24 months so the likelihood for the stock is it is going to be re-rated by analysts at some stage."
Metro Performance Glass advanced 1 per cent to 99 cents. Chief executive Nigel Rigby is stepping down after five years, saying "the time is right" for new leadership.
Since its initial public offering in 2014, the company has repeatedly downgraded its guidance and in October announced a strategic review of all aspects of its business with advice from First NZ Capital while trimming forecast capital expenditure for the current financial year by as much as a fifth.
"I think he has tried really hard with that business, he's pretty knowledgeable and his passion for the business was really strong, so it will be interesting to see where he goes," McIntyre said. "They have disappointed, more on the outlook statements than anything else."
Property for Industry gained 0.6 per cent to $1.645. It raised annual earnings guidance as the industrial real estate investor benefited from stronger leasing since its half-year result.
"There seems to be activity running through the property sector today - the sector as a whole has had good volume through it. That was a nice announcement from PFI," McIntyre said.
Sky Network Television was the worst performer, down 3.8 per cent to $2.57, while NZX dropped 2.7 per cent to $1.09 and CBL fell 1.3 per cent to $3.03.
Outside the benchmark index, New Zealand Oil & Gas dipped 0.7 per cent to 71 cents.
Chairman Rodger Finlay and director Duncan Saville have resigned following the announcement this morning that OG Oil & Gas has received approval from the Overseas Investment Office for its partial takeover bid for NZOG.