MARKET CLOSE: Fletcher Building plunges on Adamson ouster
By Sophie Boot
July 20 (BusinessDesk) - New Zealand shares fell, dragged lower by Fletcher Building hitting a six-week low, as the
company's board advised a second large earnings downgrade this year and the departure of its chief executive, Mark
Adamson.
The S/NZX50 Index dropped 60.31 points, or 0.8 percent, to 7,672.44. Within the index, 29 stocks fell, 11 rose and 10 were
unchanged. Turnover was $185.3 million.
Fletcher Building dropped 6.2 percent to $7.59, though it traded as low as $7.38 shortly after the market opened to the
news about Adamson, who will leave with immediate effect with the loss of share options and other incentives as the
company slashed full-year earnings guidance and flagged an impairment against Australian assets.
Fletcher said operating earnings in the year ended June 30 were about $525 million, down from $682 million in 2016 and
below the $610 million-to-$650 million range the company gave in March, itself a 15 percent downgrade against earlier
guidance because of problems with two major construction projects. Today it said losses at those projects, which it
hasn't identified, would be larger than expected and also announced a $220 million impairment against its Iplex
Australia and Tradelink business units.
"It's had a pretty whippy day, decent range - open at around $7.40, up to $7.75 and back to where we are," said David
Price, broker at Forsyth Barr. "It opened weak, and when we had the conference call at 11(am), people took comfort that
there were no real cockroaches in the 2018 numbers."
The company is being investigated by the stockmarket regulator over trading ahead of today's announcement and the March
downgrade.
SkyCity dropped 0.7 percent to $4.23. The completion of its $470 million convention centre, widely understood to be one
of the two major projects which are blowing out Fletcher's budget, has been delayed to the middle of 2019 from February
2019.
Z Energy declined 2.6 percent to $7.82, Metlifecare fell 2.5 percent to $5.50 and Air New Zealand dropped 1.6 percent to
$3.415.
The dual-listed banks led the index's gainers again, with ANZ gaining 2.7 percent to $32.56 and Westpac up 2.6 percent
to $35.31. The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) yesterday released its new "capital adequacy" targets
and will require a 150-basis-point increase in the minimum safety reserves that must be held by the big four banks
there.
"There was quite a divergence of opinion in Australia as to the amount of capital that would need to be raised, there
were some quite extreme numbers and they'd managed to scare the horses, there had been some reasonably heavy selling a
couple of days ago ahead of the release," Price said. "So yesterday was a relief rally, and that's continued today, as
the numbers are on the face of it very manageable. There were people running around saying they were going to need to
have decent sized capital raisings, but that's not going to happen."
CBL Corp rose 2.3 percent to $3.60 and Port of Tauranga gained 1.8 percent to $4.62.
(BusinessDesk)