Fletcher Building gained 0.8 per cent to $7.84. The stock sustained losses beginning last week, falling as low as $7.47 on Monday, when Fletcher downgraded its 2017 earnings for the second time this year, with chief executive Mark Adamson leaving immediately. It has recovered nearly 5 per cent this week.
"It's continuing to have a bit of a resurgence, what happened does point to some problems but those were reasonably well known," Davies said. "The market has probably responded a bit to the certainty, and a new CEO could shake things up a bit."
Fonterra Shareholders Fund advanced 0.5 per cent to $6.03. Fonterra Cooperative Group lifted its forecast farmgate payout for the 2018 season to $6.75 per kilogram of milk solids from an earlier projection of $6.50/kgMS and up from $6.15/kgMS in the 2016/17 season. It projected earnings per share in line with the previous season, saying global supply and demand were "rebalancing".
Ebos Group was the worst performer, down 2.2 per cent to $17.90, while Stride Property fell 1.8 per cent to $1.66.
Sky City dropped 1.4 per cent to $3.45. The casino owner announced yesterday it will write off all the goodwill in its Darwin casino complex with an A$95m (NZ$101m) impairment, saying increased competition for gaming machines in the Northern Territory hurt revenue and earnings. The non-cash impairment will be recognised in its results for the year ended June 30 and will reduce the book value of the Darwin property to A$195m.
Outside the benchmark index, Tower gained 2.8 per cent to 93 cents. Shares in the general insurer took a pounding yesterday, falling as low as 86 cents from $1.26 the day before in response to the Commerce Commission rejecting a merger application at $1.40 a share from rival insurer Vero.
Owned by Brisbane-based Suncorp, Vero sought permission to acquire Tower's operations after winning a bidding war with Canada's Fairfax Financial Holdings in a deal that valued Tower at $236m. The Vero bid trumped FFH's offer at $1.17 a share.
"The average trading price today is still lower than yesterday, so I don't think it's a huge recovery or a sign the market is going to keep pushing it up," Davies said.