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Most actively traded companies on the TSX

Some of the most active companies traded Tuesday on the Toronto Stock Exchange:

Toronto Stock Exchange (15,372.35, down 49.56 points):

Bombardier Inc. (TSX:BBD.B). Aerospace, rail equipment. Up 11 cents, or 4.72 per cent, at $2.44 on 9.3 million shares.

Kinder Morgan Canada Ltd. (TSX:KML). Oil and gas. Down 76 cents, or 4.47 per cent, to $16.24 on 6.5 million shares. Shares in the company fell in their debut Tuesday on the Toronto Stock Exchange as political uncertainty swirled around the company’s flagship Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project. At $1.75 billion, its public market debut is on track to be the fourth most valuable in Canadian history.

Encana Corp. (TSX:ECA). Oil and gas. Down 74 cents, or 5.19 per cent, to $13.53 on 4.487 million shares.

Kinross Gold Corp. (TSX:K). Miner. Down four cents, or 0.70 per cent, to $5.69 on 4.482 million shares.

Element Fleet Management Corp. (TSX:EFN). Financial Services. Down 72 cents, or 6.65 per cent, to $10.10 on 3.7 million shares.

Tembec Inc. (TSX:TMB). Forest Products. Up 30 cents, or 7.19 per cent, to $4.47 on 3.02 million shares.

Companies reporting major news:

Bank of Nova Scotia (TSX:BNS). Bank. Up 48 cents, or 0.63 per cent, to $76.60 on 2.1 million shares. Scotiabank boosted its second-quarter net income by 30 per cent to $2.06 billion. Earnings amounted to $1.62 per share, compared with $1.23 per share or $1.58 billion of net income during the second quarter of 2016. It had $6.58 billion of revenue during the three-month period ended April 30, compared with $6.59 billion a year ago.

Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR). Transportation. Up $1.14, or 1.10 per cent, to $104.52 on 1.01 million shares. CN and the union representing about 3,000 employees reached a tentative agreement to avert a Tuesday morning labour strike.

Husky Energy (TSX:HSE). Oil and gas. Down 33 cents, or two per cent, to $16.13 on 849,913 shares. At an investor event in Toronto, CEO Rob Peabody says the Calgary-based company is bracing for lower oil prices with a new five-year plan that suggests it can sustain operations even if benchmark New York prices fall as low as US$35 per barrel, aiming to reduce Husky’s break-even commodity price point by 2021 to US$32 per barrel from the current US$33.50.

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