NZ shares gain; retirement village operators buoyed by M&A
New Zealand shares rose as the prospect of a higher takeover bid for Metlifecare whetted investor appetite for other retirement village operators, while Restaurant Brands hit a record on its foray into California.
Monday, December 23rd 2019, 6:49PM
by BusinessDesk
The S&P/NZX 50 Index advanced 64.96 points, or 0.6 percent, to 11,547.23. Within the index, 26 stocks rose, 18 fell, and six were unchanged. Turnover was $77.8 million.
Metlifecare received a better takeover offer from its unnamed suitor than the initial $6.50 put forward, and its board has "substantially negotiated" a scheme implementation agreement.
Trading in the shares was halted before the market opened pending the announcement. They closed last week at $6.38.
“The market’s waiting expectantly to see what the offer might be,” said Grant Williamson, a director at Hamilton Hindin Greene. “I would think it’s the other side of $7 to be honest.”
Williamson said the offer boosted demand for other retirement village and aged care operators.
Oceania Healthcare rose 5.1 percent at $1.23 on a volume of 959,000 shares, more than twice its 90-day average of 443,000. It was the most traded stock on the day.
Arvida Group rose 4.1 percent to $1.80, and Summerset Group was up 4.4 percent at $8.35, both records for the retirement village operators. Ryman Healthcare increased 0.6 percent to $16.10.
Restaurant Brands led the market higher. It reached a record $13.10 with just 5,096 shares traded, well down on its 42,000 average. The fast-food operator agreed to buy 70 KFC and Taco Bell stores in Southern California for US$73 million.
Williamson said the company’s aggressive expansion in recent years into Australia, Hawaii and now the mainland US had been impressive.
Port of Tauranga climbed 3.5 percent to a record close $7.97, with 107,000 shares traded, just below its 116,000 average.
Freightways increased 1.6 percent to $8.77. It said its long-serving chief financial officer Mark Royle will step down next year and be replaced by Air New Zealand executive Stephan Deschamps.
Trading was relatively quiet heading into the Christmas holiday, with no companies trading on volumes of more than a million shares.
Spark New Zealand declined 0.2 percent to $4.40 on a volume of 931,000 shares. It typically trades on a volume of 3.1 million.
Tourism Holdings posted the day’s biggest decline, down 2.4 percent at $3.20 on a volume of 89,000 shares, less than its 128,000 average.
Outside the benchmark index, Cannasouth rose 1.7 percent to 60 cents. It said it received resource consent for its joint venture cultivation centre in Waikato.
Moa Group was unchanged at 29.5 cents. The hospitality group and beer maker said director Craig Styris, an executive director at Pioneer Capital, stepped down from the board, effective immediately. Pioneer distributed its Moa holding to its own investors in September and is no longer considered a substantial shareholder.
Wellington Drive Technologies decreased 0.6 percent to 17.1 cents. The company affirmed its 2019 earnings guidance range of $3.5 million to $4 million and said its preliminary 2020 forecast was for earnings of $4.5 million.
« Record year beckons for NZ shares; index reweighting drives big volume | Retirement village shares feature in subdued Christmas trading » |
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