NZ sharemarket opens sharply lower after OCR cut

March 16, 2020
The NZX-Top 50 slid quickly on opening on Friday, and the news hasn’t got much better.

The New Zealand sharemarket has opened sharply lower after the Reserve Bank slashed its official cash rate.

The central bank cut its benchmark interest rate by three quarters of a percentage point, to support the economy against the impact of the Covid-19 coronavirus.

The benchmark top-50 index opened down about 1.3 per cent in early trading.

This followed the near 5 per cent fall on Friday.

1 NEWS’ Katie Bradford reports on the Reserve Bank slashing the cash rate to 0.25 per cent. (Source: Other)

However, travel-related stocks were hammered again after the government imposed strict entry conditions on travellers over the weekend.

Auckland Airport's shares fell 12 per cent after it withdrew the earnings forecast it made last Friday.

The official cash rate has dropped from one per cent to .25 per cent in a bid to boost the economy. (Source: Other)

Air New Zealand was in a trading halt after it announced major cuts to international services, plans to reduce local flights by as much as a third, and lay off staff.

The New Zealand dollar is sitting at a near 11-year low of 59.8 US cents.

rnz.co.nz

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