Skip to main content

Bank of Nova Scotia(BNS-T)
TSX

Today's Change
Real-Time Last Update

Closing Bell: Bank of Nova Scotia down on Wednesday (BNS)

Automated Summaries - The Globe and Mail - Wed Apr 10, 4:02PM CDT

Bank of Nova Scotia opened trading today at $67.90 and closed at $67.04. It traded at a low of $66.80 to a high of $67.99.

The price decreased -2.10 percent from the previous day's close of $68.48.

During the day across North America, the TSX Composite closed 0.46% at 22361.78, the S&P 500 closed 0.14% at 5209.91, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed -0.02% at 38883.67 and the Nasdaq Composite closed 0.32% at 16306.64.

Bank of Nova Scotia traded under BNS on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX).

A total of 7,622,469 shares was traded during the last trading day, with total trades of 17,227. On average, Bank of Nova Scotia has traded 4,293,168 shares over the last 5-days and 4,177,079 year-to-date.

The TSX overall saw 976 price advancers against 4,291 declines and 93 unchanged.

During the prior 52 weeks, BNS.TO has traded as high as $70.40 (March 28,2024) and low as $55.20 (October 27,2023). Moreover, the shares have eased -0.84% in 52 weeks, while they have raised 3.94% since the start of 2024.

It announced a 1.06 dividend on February 27/24, with an April 01/24 ex-date and April 26/24 pay day.

Following today's trading, Bank of Nova Scotia has a market capitalization of $83.69 billion on a float of 1,222,133 shares outstanding. Its annual EPS is $6.11.

Bank of Nova Scotia is a TSX Banks company headquartered in Halifax, CAN.

Bank of Nova Scotia's average recommendation is "Hold" based on 13.00 analysts according to Zacks. From those 13 analysts, 1 have sell ratings and 12 analysts gave hold ratings.

AI at The Globe and Mail
This report is produced using automated technology that summarizes market data into articles for our readers. Ongoing project experiments that leverage artificial intelligence include valuation screens across 14 categories and end-of-day Closing Summary reports for all North American securities..

More from The Globe