Fisher and Paykel Healthcare feels brunt of Trump's proposed tariffs
President Donald Trump’s renewed tariff threats on his inauguration day rattled Fisher and Paykel Healthcare while the New Zealand sharemarket lacked any real direction.
Tuesday, January 21st 2025, 6:59PM
by BusinessDesk
The S&P/NZX 50 Index wavered between an intraday low of 13,019.23 and a high of 13,127.79 before closing at 13.052.9, down 35.41 points or 0.27%.
It was another quiet trading day, with 17.95 million shares worth $82.05m changing hands.
'Sensitive'
Trump said he was thinking of 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada from Feb 1 because of their border policies as he signed a raft of executive orders during his first day in office. He did say he was not ready to impose universal tariffs yet.
Market leader and influencer Fisher and Paykel Healthcare manufactures products in Mexico and exports to the United States. Its share price settled at $38.30, down 70c or 1.79%, after reaching a high of $39.50 and a low of $37.61.
Matt Goodson, managing director of Salt Funds Management, said everyone is groping around about what’s noise and what’s real from Trump.
“Fisher and Paykel’s gyration reflected market sentiment and reaction to the tariff comments. The market is so sensitive, as what is said and what is done may be two different things.”
The US markets were closed for the Martin Luther King Jnr public holiday, and the S&P 500 Futures were up 0.6% at one stage but then fell to 0.13% after Trump’s comment on Mexico and Canada tariffs.
One US commentator said it would be interesting to see how markets handle Trump's unpredictability going forward, but the current view is positive regarding the pro-business aspects of deregulation and lower taxes.
Investors will also know that the sharemarket did well under Trump last time around – indeed, he saw it as one of his primary yardsticks.
Across the Tasman, the S&P/ASX 200 Index was having a strong day, rising 0.63% to 8,400 points at 6pm NZ time, with bank shares in demand.
Local stocks
Interestingly, there were as many gainers as decliners despite the NZX 50’s slight fall – the difference being Fisher and Paykel Healthcare’s decline.
Vulcan Steel climbed 53c or 6.87% to $8.25; Delegat Group was up 20c or 4.16% to $5.01; Ventia Services increased 16c or 3.96% to $4.20; and takeover target Millennium & Copthorne Hotels NZ gained 3c to $2.17.
Seeka, the country’s largest kiwifruit grower, increased 19c or 5.74% to $3.50 after upgrading its full-year gross profit to $27.5m-$31.5m from $23m-$27m. The company had a loss of $21m in the 2023 financial year.
Seeka told the market that the increased earnings reflect a strong close-out to the year through lower-than-expected overhead costs and higher-then-anticipated income in December.
Goodson said Seeka is levered to kiwifruit volumes, and the sector has had a better season than it did the previous year.
Amongst retail stocks, KMD Brands rebounded 2c or 5% to 42c; Michael Hill was up 1c to 61c; The Warehouse added 2c or 1.98% to $1.03; and Briscoe Group eased 7c to $4.73.
Leading banking groups made gains, ANZ was up 65c or 1.99% to $33.25, and Westpac added 43c to $36.05.
South Port NZ increased 2c or 2.56% to 80c; Synlait Milk was up 1c or 2.47% to 41.5c; Eroad gained 2c or 1.89% to $1.08; Rakon added 2c or 3.33% to 62c; and Pacific Edge improved 0.002c or 3.39% to 6.1c.
Turners Automotive was up 6c to $5.42; Vista Group gained 8c or 2.57% to $3.19; Green Cross Health increased 2c or 2.56% to 80c; PGG Wrightson improved 3c or 1.86% to $1.64; and Being AI added 1c or 3.39% to 30.5c.
Scott Technology, up 8c or 3.64% to $2.28, secured its third automation project with Rio Tinto in Australia, this time automating the minerals laboratory at the West Angelas mine in Western Australia.
The semi-automated Rocklabs system features two Rio 350 Crushers and three ABM 3000 Pulverisers, designed to process up to 700 samples per day.
In the energy sector, Contact was down 14c to $9.40, and Mercury was up 5c to $6.08.
Goodson said Mercury had a solid quarterly update on generation volume and higher selling prices. There was enough there for a small earnings upgrade, but what matters most is whether Mercury will move out of the MSCI World Index.
AFT Pharmaceuticals declined 5c or 1.79% to $2.74; Accordant Group was down 2c or 4.08% to 47c; and Santana Minerals decreased 2c or 3.85% to 50c.
Cooks Coffee, unchanged at 26c, reported a 26.2% increase in café sales to $54.3m for the nine months ending December and a 32.4% rise for the 13 weeks ending Dec 29.
Cooks has 87 Esquires sites in the UK and Ireland, up from 71 at the end of December 2023.
« Takeover for Millennium and Copthorne; Otherwise quiet on NZX | Rocket Lab Surges Over 30% to Record High Amid Renewed Space Exploration Optimism » |
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