New Zealand shares fell in quiet trading ahead of a busy mid-week reporting period, led lower by Sky Network Television and Mercury NZ, while Synlait Milk and a2 Milk Co rose.
The S&P/NZX 50 Index declined 10.06 points, or 0.1 per cent, to 8,115.25. Within the index, 22 stocks rose, 20 fell and eight were unchanged. Turnover was $67 million.
"We're under-performing a little, it's a reasonable subdued performance to start the week which is probably not surprising as there's an avalanche of results coming in the rest of the week," said Mark Lister, head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment Partners.
"I suspect it's a bit of wait-and-see approach from investors, there will be no shortage of news flow later in the week."
Sky TV led the index lower, down 2.5 per cent to $2.73, with Mercury falling 2 per cent to $3.265.
Freightways fell 1.2 per cent to $7.44. It reported a gain in first-half revenue although profit fell 8 per cent to $31.4m on the impact of a year-earlier one-time gain and a narrower earnings margin at its express package and business mail division. Sales rose 7.1 per cent to $292m.
"It was pretty much in line with expectations, there wasn't a huge amount for people to latch onto to drive the share price one way or the other," Lister said.
NZX dipped 0.9 per cent to $1.10. It boosted annual profit 62 per cent, cutting costs by trimming down its agri publishing unit and refocusing on its core markets business which relied on a glut of new debt listings to offset the lack of new equity initial public offerings and several delistings in the year.
Synlait was the best performer, up 5.2 per cent to $7.05. The company has not made any new announcements and the stock traded about 2 per cent higher through the morning but rose above $7 after 3pm, hitting an intra-day high of $7.09 before pulling back a little towards the close.
Lister said he would expect the stock to have gained slightly as it often follows a2 Milk up, but the large gain today didn't corroborate.
A2 itself rose 0.4 per cent to $9.28, and hit a record $9.44 during the session.
"After the stunning year last year, it's up another 16 per cent this year - it has gone on to even higher highs. They report Wednesday so the market is obviously betting on a pretty good result," Lister said.
Outside the benchmark index, Evolve Education fell 19 per cent to 61c after the early childhood education group gave its second full-year profit warning and said it is likely to write down goodwill on acquisitions and cut its dividend.
Net profit before one-time items is expected to be $11m to $12m in the 12 months ending March 31, down from previous guidance of $14m to $15m.