Prime Minister John Key says the rush on pre-registration for
Mighty River Power shares is a reflection of the interest in
the float but he will not speculate on whether there is a
danger it will be over-subscribed.
Up to five would-be investors per second were signing up
online to learn more about the share sale yesterday after the
Government announced a surprise incentive.
But that early enthusiasm from individual Kiwi investors had
parallels with the 1999 float of Contact Energy, which 14
years later was majority-owned by a foreign company, Labour
says.
The mightyrivershares.govt.nz site, where individual New
Zealand investors can pre-register their interest in buying
shares in the state-owned power generator, went live
yesterday as the sales process was officially launched by
Finance Minister Bill English and State Owned Enterprises
Minister Tony Ryall.
Mr Ryall announced investors who pre-registered may receive
more shares than those who didn't, if demand for the shares
outstripped the amount available for sale.
By early afternoon many would-be investors were experiencing
difficulty getting on to the site.
Staff at the share offer's call centre advised trying again
"in a few hours".
Some users who were able to access the site reported
difficulties in completing the pre-registration.
Speaking from Mexico overnight where he is having trade
talks, Mr Key said he understood issues with the website
crashing were now resolved.
"There's been a very significant number of registrations in
the first 24 hours, an indication of how popular the interest
is in terms of finding out what's going on. That's a good
sign."
Asked if there was a concern the Government guarantee of at
least $1000 in shares for New Zealanders who wanted to invest
risked pushing the share price up, he said he had to be
careful what he said with the process underway.
However, asked if there had been more interest than
anticipated, he said "it's certainly been very significant".
"We are absolutely going to honour the commitments we have
made which is for New Zealanders to be at the front of the
queue, so if there is lots of retail interest, then there
will be lots of New Zealanders at the front of the queue.
We'll accommodate all of that."
Mr Ryall said on Monday that the Government was "pretty
confident that the website will be able to deal with a wide
range of traffic".
But by late yesterday he acknowledged that "huge volumes of
traffic on the website in the first few hours" were causing
problems.
"Some people may have had difficulty accessing the site, and
others will have noticed it was slow in processing requests
for information."
By 7pm about 70,000 New Zealanders had pre-registered, with
about five per second at times, he said.
"There is plenty of time before pre-registration ends on 22
March - and there is no advantage in pre-registering
earlier."
But at least some would-be investors were able to
pre-register before yesterday. One Auckland woman told the
Herald she was able to pre-register on Monday evening by
following a link contained in an emailed newsletter from
National's Hunua MP, Paul Hutchinson.
The Government's $1.1 million advertising campaign for the
share offer also began last night with taxpayer-funded ads on
television and Trade Me. The ads had been vetted by the
Auditor General to ensure they did not include political
messages.
Despite strong public opposition to the Government's partial
asset sales, Labour's SOE spokesman, Clayton Cosgrove, said
early indications of keen public demand for shares were
"eminently predictable".
"It is very similar to Contact Energy - I think you had
220,000 Kiwi shareholders initially - and today that company
is now foreign-owned and the National Government lost an
election over it so it doesn't surprise me at all."
- Claire Trevett and Adam Bennett of the New Zealand
Herald
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