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BCE CEO George Cope attends the company's AGM in Toronto on Thursday May 9, 2013.Chris Young/The Canadian Press

A multi–billion-dollar deal in the telecom sector and a potential purchase in the Canadian oil patch helped push the Toronto stock market to another record close Wednesday.

The S&P/TSX composite index gained 79.25 points to 15,394.38 – the latest in a string of record-high closes.

BCE Inc. is moving to privatize affiliate Bell Aliant in a deal worth roughly $3.95-billion. The telecom giant already controls 44 per cent of the regional telecommunications company.

Bell Aliant shareholders will receive cash and BCE shares for a combined value of $31 per share. BCE shares were up 81 cents to $49.82, while Bell Aliant shot up $3.34 to $31.53.

BCE said it plans a capital investment of $2.1-billion across Atlantic Canada over the next five years to continue the roll out of broadband wireline and wireless for consumers and business users.

"This acquisition is the next logical step and BCE's large national buildup in acquiring all of this subsidiary will simplify their corporate structure, eliminate costs and increase operating efficiency throughout BCE," said Kash Pashootan, portfolio manager at First Avenue Advisory in Ottawa, a Raymond James company.

Also, Talisman Energy acknowledged that it has been approached by Spanish energy giant Repsol. Talisman added that "there is no assurance that any transaction will be agreed." Talisman shares soared $1.40 or 13.25 per cent to $11.97.

The Canadian dollar was up 0.07 of a cent to 93.21 cents (U.S.).

In New York, Boeing helped depress the Dow industrials as the aerospace giant reported a profit of $1.65-billion (U.S.), or $2.24 a share, beating estimates of $2.01 a share. However, revenue of $22.05-billion narrowly missed expectations of $22.23-billion and its shares slipped 2.34 per cent to $126.71, even as Boeing boosted its earnings guidance for the year.

The Dow lost 26.91 points to 17,086.63 .

A well-received report from Apple helped push the Nasdaq to its highest level since September 2000 – up 17.68 points to 4,473.7.

Apple Inc. reported a 12 per cent increase in its quarterly profit, exceeding analyst estimates as iPhone shipments rose 13 per cent compared with a year earlier and its shares gained 2.6 per cent to $97.19.

After the close, Facebook posted earnings per share ex-items of 42 cents, a dime better than estimates. Revenue of $2.91-billion beat estimates of $2.81. However, its shares were off 0.6 per cent in after-hours trading.

The S&P 500 index added 3.48 points to a fresh record close of 1,987.01.

Traders also kept an eye on simmering tensions between Russia and the West as Ukraine's Defence Ministry said two Ukrainian military fighter jets had been shot down in the eastern part of the country.

There was relief on markets Tuesday after the European Union stopped well short of moving to jump to so-called Phase 3 sanctions against Moscow for its support of Ukrainian rebels. Such sanctions could cripple the Russian economy and possibly derail a fragile European economic recovery.

On the TSX, the metals and mining sector was ahead 1.44 per cent with September copper unchanged at $3.21 a pound.

The energy sector climbed 1.24 per cent, while September crude oil in New York rose 73 cents to $103.12 a barrel.

The gold sector slipped about 0.52 per cent as August bullion faded $1.60 to $1,304.70 an ounce.

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