A2 Milk shares fell 2.46 per cent to $17.02 after hitting a record $17.57 yesterday and is still up more than 19 per cent in the past month.
Fisher & Paykel Healthcare eased 1.52 per cent to $16.15 while Ryman sank 2.84 per cent to $12.99, making it the day's largest decliner.
Given falling interest rates globally, stocks that pay healthy dividends remain in demand and Price says he expects that to continue "with the promise of more juice for the patient coming up in the form of lower interest rates."
The New Zealand market's median price-to-earnings ratio currently is a stellar 23 times earnings, but when the risk-free rate falls, that makes share prices appear reasonable, he says.
Contact Energy, which paid a first-half dividend of 16 cents per share and predicted a full-year payout of 39 cents, up from 32 cents the previous year, gained 0.13 per cent to $7.82 but was earlier up as high as $7.97.
Fellow utility Meridian Energy advanced 1 per cent to $4.99 while the other two major electricity generators and retailers, Mercury New Zealand and Genesis Energy, were unchanged at $4.75 and $3.44 respectively.
Telecommunications network provider Chorus rose 0.56 per cent to $5.42.
Logistics heavyweight Mainfreight also defied the downward trend, gaining another 0.14 per cent to $42.14. Mainfreight will hold its annual shareholders' meeting next week and the New Zealand Shareholders' Association has reminded members that it gave chief executive Don Braid, who led the company since 2000, its Beacon Award last year for outstanding performance.
Mainfreight "has continued to grow and prosper over a long period" and its share price has risen from $23.80 in July 2017, NZSA said.
Among the day's largest gainers were out-of-favour stocks Sky Network Television, up 1.59 per cent at $1.28, and Fletcher Building, up 1.03 per cent at $4.91.
Fletcher shares are down 30 per cent from a year ago while Sky TV shares are down 50 per cent.