The NZX 50 fell 111 points, or 0.9%, to close at 12,764 on Tuesday, extending losses from the morning session after markets reopened from Monday’s holiday and marking a third consecutive day of declines. The benchmark slipped to its lowest level since March 30, dragged down primarily by consumer staples, materials, real estate, and healthcare stocks. Sentiment was further weighed by uncertainty over US-Iran peace talks and rising oil prices, which heightened concerns about domestic inflation. At the same time, US equity futures were choppy ahead of a wave of earnings releases from major technology companies. Notable decliners included Ryman Healthcare (-4.2%), Summerset Group (-3.3%), A2 Milk (-2.7%), Mainfreight (-2.3%), Ebos Group (-0.2%), Contact Energy (-1.2%), ANZ Group (-0.9%), Westpac Banking Corp. (-0.8%), and Fisher & Paykel (-0.7%). In corporate developments, capital markets operator NZX launched a new futures index, the S&P/NZX 20, providing equity investors with a more efficient tool for managing risk.