Serko shares soar to 2 1/2 year high
Serko shares soar to 2 1/2 year high as earnings upgrade whets appetite for growth stocks.
Serko shares soar to 2 1/2 year high as earnings upgrade whets appetite for growth stocks.
MARKET CLOSE: NZ shares rise as growth stocks A2, Xero, Synlait extend gains; CBL drops.
The FMA has filed insider trading charges in relation to shares of VMob/Plexure traded.
US companies are gearing up to release their latest quarterly earnings.
MARKET CLOSE: NZX50 at new high as A2 hits fresh record; Z Energy, Fletcher Building fall.
Serko said trading revenue was up 30 per cent on previous guidance.
Investors eyed a fresh round of US bank earnings due later this week.
MARKET CLOSE: NZX50 cracks 8,000, led by market darlings A2, Xero.
In Taranaki, pay rises have kept up with house prices, but Auckland workers are far behind
Amazon doesn't make the cut for a new responsible investment fund.
In Taranaki, pay rises have kept up with house prices, but Auckland workers are far behind
Market Watch: Pie Funds Mark Devcich talks political uncertainty and market records
Wall Street gained, sending the three benchmark indices to record highs.
MARKET CLOSE: NZ shares hit record on A2 gains, Eroad up, Auckland Airport falls.
MARKET CLOSE: NZ shares rise as A2 hits new record, Metro Glass recovers; Z Energy falls.
COMMENT: Signs of slowing mean battle for power might not be a bad one to lose.
US equities moved higher, bolstered by gains in shares of McDonald's.
The S&P/NZX 50 Index dipped 0.16 points, or 0.002 per cent, to 7913.62
Wall Street and the US dollar climbed on the back of Trump's tax reform plan.
The S&P/NZX 50 Index rose 26.6 points, or 0.3 per cent, to 7.913.78.
COMMENT: The reversal of Quantitative easing will be very gradual and will take years.
MARKET CLOSE: NZ shares up as confidence returns; Kathmandu, CBL, A2 Milk rise.
Slides in technology stocks including those of Apple and Facebook led Wall Street lower.
NZ shares rise in light trading; A2, Z Energy, SkyCity gain while Sky TV drops.
One analyst said the clear loser is the housing market, given NZ First's policy.
Financial markets are expected to take the weekend's election result in their stride.