The New Zealand sharemarket drifted south in early trading today as the fallout from three days of falls on Wall Street continued to affect the global market.
The benchmark NZX-50 index was down 9.90 points, or 0.3%, at 3180.522 around 10.15am, far less than Friday's dramatic 2% fall on Wall Street.
ANZ slipped $1 to $27.50 to illustrate the uncertainty in financial markets and was joined in negative territory by Michael Hill, which fell 2c to 68c,
NZ Refining was down 5c to $3.85, Guinness Peat Group down 1c to 88c and Tourism Holdings was also down 1c to 89c.
Among stocks to rise, Pike River Coal edged back some of its decline on Friday to be up 2c to $1.03, Hellaby Holdings added 3c to $1.69 and NZ Oil and Gas also lifted 3c to $1.63.
On a morning impacted by the Wellington Anniversary holiday, top stock Telecom was up 1c to $2.42, Contact Energy was unchanged on $6.00 and Fletcher Building was down 7c to $7.90.
The negative start to the week comes after a 5.2% plunge on Wall Street – the biggest three-day plunge since early last March before the worldwide rally began.
It came after US President Barack Obama outlined plans to limit the risk-taking of banks 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.
The Dow fell 216.90 points, or 2.1%, to 10,172.98 while the broader S&P 500 index fell slid 24.72 points, or 2.2%, to 1091.76. The Nasdaq Composite Index fell 60.41 points, or 2.7%, to 2205.29.