NZX 50 Edges Up in Morning Trade

2026-06-02 22:58 By Chusnul Chotimah 1 min. read

The NZX 50 climbed 31 points, or 0.2%, to 13,201 in Tuesday morning trade, halting losses from the previous session and tracking gains on Wall Street overnight, supported by persistent optimism over AI.

Consumer staples, communication services, and energy stocks were the main drivers of the index.

However, losses in the utilities sector capped the gains.

Traders also monitored developments in the US-Iran peace talks aimed at ending the war.

On the data front, New Zealand's building consents for new dwellings rebounded in April, surging 10.9%, while the merchandise terms of trade fell 2.0% quarter-on-quarter in the first quarter of 2026, worse than market expectations of a 1.2% decline.

Among the early gainers were A2 Milk (1.9%), Sky Network Television (1.3%), Scales Corporation (1.2%), Chorus (0.8%), and F&C Investment (0.8%).



News Stream
NZX 50 Edges Up in Morning Trade
The NZX 50 climbed 31 points, or 0.2%, to 13,201 in Tuesday morning trade, halting losses from the previous session and tracking gains on Wall Street overnight, supported by persistent optimism over AI. Consumer staples, communication services, and energy stocks were the main drivers of the index. However, losses in the utilities sector capped the gains. Traders also monitored developments in the US-Iran peace talks aimed at ending the war. On the data front, New Zealand's building consents for new dwellings rebounded in April, surging 10.9%, while the merchandise terms of trade fell 2.0% quarter-on-quarter in the first quarter of 2026, worse than market expectations of a 1.2% decline. Among the early gainers were A2 Milk (1.9%), Sky Network Television (1.3%), Scales Corporation (1.2%), Chorus (0.8%), and F&C Investment (0.8%).
2026-06-02
NZX 50 Pulls Back, Ends 0.6% Lower
The NZX 50 fell 74 points, or 0.6%, to close at 13,171 on Tuesday, after gaining in the previous session, as traders resumed activity following a holiday on Monday, amid uncertainty over US-Iran peace talks aimed at ending the war. The broader index pulled back from its highest level since May 7, reached on Friday, mainly weighed down by materials, financials, energy, and consumer discretionary stocks. Traders continued to assess comments from RBNZ Governor Anna Breman, who said last week that the Official Cash Rate is likely to rise sooner and more sharply than previously indicated. Caution also prevailed ahead of the release of US PMI and jobless claims figures due later this week. Among the biggest laggards were ANZ Group (-4.1%), Vulcan Steel (-3.6%), Infratil (-3.0%), Chorus (-2.3%), Westpac Banking Corp. (-1.8%), Australian Foundation Investment (-1.8%), F&C Investment (-1.7%), Hallenstein Glasson (-1.6%), and Fisher & Paykel (-1.3%).
2026-06-02
New Zealand Stocks Muted in Morning Trade
The NZX 50 was almost flat, trading around 13,242 in Tuesday morning trade, after gaining in the previous session, as traders resumed activity following a holiday on Monday, with gains in energy, consumer discretionary, and utilities offset by declines in communication services, materials, and healthcare. The broader index pulled back from its highest level since May 7, reached on Friday, as traders continued to assess comments from RBNZ Governor Anna Breman, who said last week that the Official Cash Rate is likely to rise sooner and more sharply than previously indicated. Caution also prevailed ahead of the release of the US PMI and jobless claims figures due later this week. However, a rally on Wall Street overnight lifted sentiment, supported by optimism that the US and Iran will end the war. Ebos Group gained 1.6%, AFT Pharmaceuticals rose 1.3%, and Auckland International Airport climbed 1.0%, while Chorus and Fisher & Paykel fell 1.2% and 0.8%, respectively.
2026-06-01