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NZ sharemarket closes slightly down as investors absorb shocks

The New Zealand sharemarket closed low today as US President Barack Obama's announcement to limit bank risk-taking last week continues to have a ripple effect on the global market.The benchmark NZX-50 index closed down 1.772 points, or 0.6%, at 3188.657.T

NZPA
Mon, 25 Jan 2010

The New Zealand sharemarket closed low today as US President Barack Obama's announcement to limit bank risk-taking last week continues to have a ripple effect on the global market.

The benchmark NZX-50 index closed down 1.772 points, or 0.6%, at 3188.657.

Though New Zealand's market has been affected by Wall Street woes, Grant Williamson, director of Hamilton, Hindin and Greene, said the local market had remained resilient, only down a fraction.

"We are not following it too closely," he said. "We are just keeping an eye on what is happening overseas, but performing better than what most investors would have expected today.

"I think most investors locally are just buying time as we wait for the reporting season to kick-off in February. There is really a lack of domestic news to influence our prices at the moment."

Wellington's anniversary holiday today also caused a less-active market, and tomorrow's Australia Day will also result in another quiet day – "all in all, it's going to be a slow start for this week," Mr Williamson said.

Among leading shares Fletcher Building was up 5c to $8.02, Contact Energy rose 5c to $6.05 and Telecom was down 2c to $2.39.

Rising stocks also included Hellaby Holdings with 4c gain to $1.70 and Goodman Property 2c to $1.03.

In negative territory, Fisher & Paykel Healthcare fell 2c to $3.30, Piker River Coal declined 1c to $1.00, after a slight rise to $1.03 this morning, and New Zealand Oil and Gas fell 2c to $1.58.

The negative start to the week came after Wall Street closed last week with a second day of heavy falls, after Mr Obama's announcement and was intensified on Friday with uncertainty over the pending confirmation vote for Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke to a second term.

In addition, the election victory earlier in the week of Republican Scott Brown in Massachusetts for the US Senate seat of the late Edward Kennedy, costing Democrats their sure-fire majority, also added to the sense of uncertainty.

"Between uncertainty over Bernanke, Obama's bank regulation proposal and the election in Massachusetts, the market is like a cork in the water and the Democrats just hit the flush," Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank in Chicago, told Reuters.

NZPA
Mon, 25 Jan 2010
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NZ sharemarket closes slightly down as investors absorb shocks
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