"It certainly gave our market a good boost today - we're at record highs again - and we've seen good support for our yield plays."
Meridian rose as high as $4.18, and led the market higher, up 4.3 per cent at $4.165 on a volume of 1.9 million shares. Spark New Zealand gained 3.1 per cent at $3.15 on a volume of 6 million, both slightly larger than usual. Spark was the most traded stock.
Mercury gained 2.6 per cent to a record $3.93 after announcing plans to start construction on a $256m wind-farm from August. The project is expected to eventually deliver an extra $30m a year to Mercury's earnings, and its construction will be funded by debt. Rating agency Standard & Poor's said Mercury's BBB+ credit rating can cope with the extra leverage.
Auckland International Airport was another to hit a record, trading as high as $8.235 before ending the day at $8.20, up 2.5 per cent. About 1.9 million shares changed hands, compared to its 1.1 million 90-day average. Mainfreight rose 2 per cent to a record $35.70 on 81,000 shares, almost twice its three-monthly average.
Air New Zealand was another trading on bigger than usual volumes. About 2.4 million shares changed hands, compared to its 964,000 three-monthly average. It rose 2.3 per cent to $2.415.
Of other stocks trading on more than a million shares, Goodman Property Trust slipped 0.3 per cent to $1.69, Arvida Group fell 1.6 per cent to $1.26, Trade Me Group increased 0.2 per cent to $6.41 and Contact Energy gained 1.2 per cent at $6.65.
Kathmandu Holdings posted the biggest decline on the day, down 3.4 per cent at $2.27. The retailer yesterday reported wider margins. A tax refund also underpinned its first-half earnings, and offset flat sales at its Kathmandu chain. McIntyre said investors were disappointed at the lack of outlook offered by the company.
Restaurant Brands New Zealand slipped 0.3 per cent to $8.87. Finaccess Capital's partial takeover offer closed yesterday and the Mexican firm attracted 91 per cent of acceptances, meaning it will scale down what it buys from selling shareholders to ensure it ends up with a 75 per cent stake.
NZX was unchanged at $1. Hawke's Bay Regional Council today approved the creation of a holding company to float Napier Port more easily. The local body will decide on whether to proceed with an initial public offering in the coming weeks.
McIntyre said the prospect of low interest rates should support interest in NZX's debt market, which has been a source of cheap funding for corporates. Infratil-controlled Wellington International Airport last week raised $125m in an 11-year bond, paying 4 per cent annual interest which will reset in six years.
Infratil gained 1.5 per cent to $4.10 on an unusually large volume of 3.1 million compared to its 427,000 average.
Outside the benchmark index, Methven rose 0.6 per cent to $1.64 after getting High Court approval for its takeover by GWA Group. The board declared an interim dividend of 4.69 cents per share to be paid on April 10, the same day it will delist from the NZX.
Abano Healthcare sank 11 per cent to $4.40, its second day of double-digit declines. The medical services investor warned of weaker profit due to tough trading conditions in Australia and said it's halted its acquisition programme there.
Wellington Drive Technology fell 6.4 per cent to 22 cents after saying an existing customer has passed over the manufacturer in a procurement process. It said that had already been built into earnings guidance. Chair Tony Nowell, who had previously indicated plans to retire, today resigned from the board with immediate effect.