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MARKET CLOSE: NZ stocks fall as Fletcher continues slide

MARKET CLOSE: NZ stocks fall as Fletcher continues slide; Telecom gains

Nov. 22 (BusinessDesk)- New Zealand shares fell, reflecting a continued slide in the price of Fletcher Building, the construction company weathering a downturn in residential building in Australasia. Telecom rose ahead of separate trading for its spun-off Chorus unit this week.

The NZX 50 fell 4.291 points, or 0.1 percent, to 3252.266. Within the index, 26 shares fell , eight rose and 16 were unchanged. Turnover was $93.6 million.

Brokers said the local bourse proved relatively resilient in the face of a sell-off in US and European equity markets amid reports a inter-party committee of the US Congress has failed to reach accord on US$1.2 trillion of budget cuts.

The kiwi dollar tumbled to an eight-month low, making New Zealand assets look relatively more attractive to overseas investors.

"The kiwi has fallen a reasonable amount in the last few weeks, so there is a bit of bargain hunting going on,” said Grant Williamson, a director at brokerage Hamilton Hindin Greene. That's helped underpin the NZX 50 to "buck the trend we are seeing overseas."

Fletcher fell 1.2 percent to $5.93 and has shed a quarter of its market value since it gave a profit warning in early October, saying first-half profit would fall 10 percent and full-year earnings growth would stall.

“Investors are saying in the short term it is not turning around earnings,” Williamson said. Building and construction "has been hit harder than most”.

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Telecom rose 1.6 percent to $2.52 as the company comes under increased focus ahead of the debut of its Chorus unit as a separately traded stock.

The Chorus stock has already traded on the ASX on a deferred basis, falling 2.2 percent to A$2.25, while Telecom's ASX shares rose 1.4 percent to $1.48, making a combined value of A$3.73.

“Analysts are researching it more in depth – creating interest in the stock,” Williamson said.

Tower, the insurer that Guinness Peat Group is looking to sell down its stake in, rose 2.1 percent to $1.49 amid reports its Christchurch-based rival AMI is close to finding committed capital after being forced into a government bailout this year. One possibility was to be acquired by a rival such as Tower, Australia's Suncorp or IAG.

GPG rose 0.8 percent to 62.5 cents.

It is “no secret that Tower is looking for acquisitions” - it has a strong balance sheet, Williamson said.

Cavalier, the carpet maker that is part of a group trying to create a wool scouring monopoly in New Zealand, was the biggest decliner on the NZX 50, falling 7.5 percent to $2.22.

Rakon, which makes components for navigation systems and smart phones, fell 3.3 percent to 58 cents.

(BusinessDesk)

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