Spark rose 0.8 per cent to $4.225 on a volume of almost 24 million shares - about eight times its average volume - and following on from yesterday's 17.1 million volume. The country's biggest telecommunications company yesterday affirmed plans to keep paying 25 cents per share in annual dividends. That was welcomed by investors hungry for income in an environment where low interest rates deter them from using term deposits or even bonds.
Sky Network Television sank to a record low $1.13 and ended the day down 4.1 per cent at $1.18 on a volume of 1.5 million shares. The pay-TV operator dropped its final dividend while reporting a $608m loss as it wrote down the value of goodwill and impaired other assets in an effort to preserve funds ahead of some large battles for premium sports rights. Its underlying earnings fell less than expected to $97.4m.
Kinnaird said the stock was under press because of the suspended dividend payment. "People are still looking for income in the current environment and they'll be exiting as a result of that."
Heartland Group fell 2.4 per cent, or 4 cents, to $1.61 after shedding rights to a 6.5 cent dividend due to be paid on September 6.
Mercury NZ led the market higher, up 3.4 per cent at $5.20 on a volume of a million shares. The power company's earnings were in line with expectations earlier this week, and while it hit a record $5.22 today, it's still trading at a dividend yield of 4.28 per cent.
Fletcher Building fell 1.5 per cent to $4.65 on a volume of 1.7 million as investors digested yesterday's earnings result, which was in line with expectations.
A2 Milk decreased 0.4 per cent to $14.75, extending yesterday's 12 per cent slump when investors were disappointed by the milk marketing firm's margin outlook. About 1.3 million shares changed hands.
"It was pretty brutal really, but that shows what the market was expecting or hoping for - if you miss that you get punished," Kinnaird said.
Of other stocks trading on volumes of more than a million shares, Arvida Group was unchanged at $1.39, and Contact Energy rose 0.2 per cent to $8.43.
Infratil increased 0.6 per cent to $4.78 after updating shareholders at its annual meeting in Auckland.
Outside the benchmark index, Cavalier Corp sank to a record low, and ended the day at 25.5 cents, down 11 per cent, after warning it will face impairment charges and writedowns of up to $9m when it reports next week.
The New Zealand government's 2023 bonds paying annual interest of 5.5 per cent were the most traded debt instrument on a volume of 2.1 million. The notes closed at a yield of 0.75 per cent, down 33 basis points.