New Zealand Stocks Trade Lower in Morning Session

2026-05-11 22:51 By Chusnul Chotimah 1 min. read

The NZX 50 dropped 47 points, or 0.4%, to 13,164 in Tuesday morning trading, erasing gains from the previous session, mainly weighed down by the healthcare, financial, tech, and utilities sectors.

Meanwhile, gains in industrial and real estate stocks capped losses.

Traders remained cautious ahead of New Zealand's food inflation data and manufacturing PMI, both due later this week.

Investors were also awaiting US inflation data on Tuesday amid rising fuel prices, which could help guide the Fed's monetary policy decision at its upcoming meeting.

Markets will also monitor the plans of US President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping later this week.

However, a rally on Wall Street overnight, supported by AI-linked stocks, limited the decline.

Among the early losers were Fisher & Paykel (-2.0%), Meridian Energy (-1.8%), Infratil (-1.5%), Gentrack Group (-1.5%), and Contact Energy (-0.5%).



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New Zealand Stocks Trade Lower in Morning Session
The NZX 50 dropped 47 points, or 0.4%, to 13,164 in Tuesday morning trading, erasing gains from the previous session, mainly weighed down by the healthcare, financial, tech, and utilities sectors. Meanwhile, gains in industrial and real estate stocks capped losses. Traders remained cautious ahead of New Zealand's food inflation data and manufacturing PMI, both due later this week. Investors were also awaiting US inflation data on Tuesday amid rising fuel prices, which could help guide the Fed's monetary policy decision at its upcoming meeting. Markets will also monitor the plans of US President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping later this week. However, a rally on Wall Street overnight, supported by AI-linked stocks, limited the decline. Among the early losers were Fisher & Paykel (-2.0%), Meridian Energy (-1.8%), Infratil (-1.5%), Gentrack Group (-1.5%), and Contact Energy (-0.5%).
2026-05-11
NZX 50 Halts Losses at Close, Up 0.3%
The NZX 50 climbed 35 points, or 0.3%, to close at 13,210 on Monday, reversing morning weakness and recovering losses from the previous session after posting a second consecutive weekly gain in the prior week. The advance was mainly supported by financials, technology, energy, and consumer staples, while declines in healthcare, industrials, and consumer discretionary stocks capped gains. Traders remained cautious ahead of New Zealand's food inflation data and manufacturing PMI, both due later this week. Investors also awaited US inflation data on Tuesday amid rising fuel prices, which could help guide the Fed's monetary policy decision at its upcoming meeting. Meanwhile, a decline in US futures amid escalating US-Iran tensions limited gains after US President Trump rejected Iran's proposal to end the conflict. Among the top performers were Infratil (4.6%), South Port New Zealand (4.0%), AFT Pharmaceuticals (2.5%), Meridian Energy (1.6%), Chorus (1.2%), and A2 Milk (0.9%).
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New Zealand Stocks Extend Losses
The NZX 50 dropped 42 points, or 0.3%, to 13,133 in Monday morning trading, down for the second straight session, tracking a fall in US futures amid escalating US-Iran tensions. Traders were also cautious as they awaited consumer and producer price data from China, New Zealand's top trading partner, later today amid continued weak demand in the mainland. Caution also grew as traders anticipated US inflation data on Tuesday amid rising fuel prices, which could help guide the Fed's monetary policy decision at its upcoming meeting. Domestically, traders are also anticipating New Zealand's food inflation data and manufacturing PMI, both due this week. The broader index declined after posting a second weekly gain in the prior week, mainly weighed down by energy, communication services, and industrials. Among the biggest laggards were Hallenstein Glasson Holdings (-1.3%), Colonial Motor Company (-0.7%), Briscoe Group (-0.6%), ANZ Group (-0.5%), and Australian Foundation Investment (-0.5%).
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