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Lion Electric Ord Shs T.LEV

Alternate Symbol(s):  LEVGQ | T.LEV.WT | LEVWQ | T.LEV.WT.A | LEGWQ

The Lion Electric Company is a manufacturer of zero-emission vehicles. The Company creates, designs and manufactures all-electric class 5 to class 8 commercial urban trucks and all-electric school buses. It is engaged in electric transportation and designs, builds and assembles many of its vehicles' components, including chassis, battery packs, truck cabins and bus bodies. Each Lion vehicle is purpose-built for electric and entirely designed and assembled in-house, with its own chassis, truck cabin or bus body, battery technology with modular energy capacity and Lion software integration. Its purpose-built all-electric trucks are divided into three main platforms, namely the Lion5, the Lion6, and the Lion8, and its line-up of all-electric buses can be divided into two main platforms, namely the LionC and LionD buses. It complements its product offering with various services, including sales support, full-service training, charging infrastructure assistance and maintenance support.


TSX:LEV - Post by User

Post by retiredcfon Dec 07, 2021 9:50am
204 Views
Post# 34205779

More on the Index

More on the Index

The manager of Canada’s biggest stock index will add a dozen new members just before Christmas, including a cryptocurrency miner, electric bus maker, funeral services provider and nine companies from the rebounding energy sector.

S&P Dow Jones Indices, manager of the S&P/TSX Composite Index, said the new members will join prior to the open of trading on Dec. 20. All currently list on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Cryptocurrency mining company Hut 8 Mining Corp., which traded for less than $2 a year ago, now has a market capitalization of nearly $2-billion at recent trades of around $12. The volatile stock crossed the $20 mark last month but is down by nearly half in less than a month.

The company reported $65.8-million in profit, fuelled by tax gains and other extraordinary items, on $128.9-million in revenue in the 12 months ended Sept. 30, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Lion Electric Co. , a maker of electric school buses and other vehicles, has a market capitalization of more than $2.2-billion despite being more than 50 per cent off its 52-week high. It had a loss of US$123.4-million on revenue of US$48.3-million in the past 12 months.

The new energy entrants are Advantage Energy Ltd.Baytex Energy Corp. , Energy Fuels Inc. , Freehold Royalties Ltd., Peyto Exploration & Development Corp. Paramount Resources Ltd. , Secure Energy Services Inc. , Tamarack Valley Energy Ltd and Topax Energy Corp. 

increase
 

Also joining: funeral services provider Park Lawn Corp. 

With the growth of index funds and other passive-investing strategies, whether a stock is part of a major index can have a meaningful effect on share prices. Fund managers who track an index need to hold shares in the companies. The stocks can see a price bump before and even after inclusion. Similarly, companies removed from the index lose a source of demand for their shares.

Research by Morningstar Direct for The Globe and Mail found Canadian mutual funds and exchange-traded funds with assets under management totalling $234-billion had returns that were 95 per cent or more correlated with the S&P/TSX Composite over the 12 months ended June 30. This included funds that explicitly say they track the index.

Dow Jones Indices uses “float” – the value of shares that aren’t held by insiders and therefore trade frequently and are easily available to the public – to judge whether a company should be included in its indexes.

To get into the composite, a company’s float-adjusted market capitalization must be 0.04 per cent, or four-hundredths of a percentage point, of the total value of the index. Also, companies must be listed on the TSX for at least six full calendar months as of the month-end prior to the quarterly review, so recent initial public offerings will have to wait a bit longer to be considered for inclusion.

To stay in the composite, a company’s float must not drop below 0.025 per cent, or 2.5 hundredths of a percentage point, of the total value of index.

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