The S&P/NZX50 Index ended 96.23 points or down 0.76% at 12,552.87, with 32.8 million shares, worth $148.7m
There were 46 gainers and 92 decliners on the main board.
Australian, Hong Kong and Japanese share markets were all down after the attack, which followed months of tension over Tehran’s advancing nuclear programme.
Late in the NZ trading day, futures market pricing pointed to a 1.7% fall on Wall Street’s blue-chip S&P 500 index.
Brent crude oil prices jumped by 5% to US$72.22 (NZ$120.11) a barrel.
Optimism tempers price falls
Harbour Asset Management portfolio manager Shane Solly said share prices here and overseas started to peel off after the attack on Iran, but the response was fairly muted due to optimism that it might not escalate.
In Australia, the decline would have been worse had it not been for gains in its energy sector, which benefited from the higher oil price, Solly said.
The Iranian attack, a major plane crash in Ahmedabad, India, and higher fuel prices combined to put aviation stocks under pressure.
Air NZ dropped a cent at one point but recovered to end steady at 59c while Qantas fell 4.9% to A$10.20 (NZ$10.98) on the ASX in late trading.
“The unfortunate situation in India has had a bit of an impact on the airline and travel sector in general,” Solly said.
“And higher oil prices increase costs, and people tend to dial back on travel when there are major geopolitical issues.”
Trading volumes slow
Market trading volumes had slowed after activity earlier in the week suggested that support was coming from other markets, as investors hedged their bets in non-US markets.
Shares in processor Synlait Milk fell 3c or 4.3% to 67c after the company announced that it had extended its $130m shareholder loan from Bright Dairy, which owns 65.25% of its stock, for a further 12 months.
The share price of Synlait’s biggest customer, a2 Milk, which also has a stake in Synlait, fell by 10c to $8.70.
Fletcher Building dropped 8c or 2.4% to $3.20 while SkyCity eased 1c to 92c.
The two are involved in legal action over SkyCity’s long-delayed International Convention Centre project in Auckland.
Spark, which was suggested as a possible takeover target this week, dropped 3.5c to $2.30.
Radius looking bright
Among the smaller companies, Radius Residential Care gained 0.5c to 29.5c after the company said its trading had been ahead of expectations in the opening months of its March 2026 financial year.
On year-to-date performance, the group’s first-half earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortisation were likely to be significantly ahead of the same period in 2025, it said.
“It gives a glimmer of light for some of the other aged-care operators as they get their businesses in order, so maybe there’s some upside to their care operations,” Solly said.
Looking ahead, BNZ expects NZ’s first quarter GDP to show a 0.7% gain when data is released next Thursday.
“We continue to hear from a wide range of businesses is that the economy is slow,” Solly said. “There is a recovery, but it’s slower than many expected.”