On Monday, Shopify announced its plans for a 10-for-1 stock split to make share ownership more accessible. So, uh, what’s that?
For starters, the financial maneuver doesn’t change the market capitalization of a company — just its number of outstanding shares.
For example, say you own one share of a company’s stock at $1k per share. A 5-to-1 stock split would give you 5 shares at $200 per share. Math!
But why are companies like Tesla, Amazon, and Alphabet all doing it?
… companies have issued stock splits to increase trading volume when their stock price has gotten too high. Examples include:
But these days, trading platforms like Robinhood allow investors to buy fractional shares of a stock (for example, ¼ of a share), making share price less important.
With that in mind, Virginia Tech finance professor Derek Klock says stock splits are a psychological play — a way for a company to tell the market it expects its stock to keep going up.
… stock splits are irrelevant, comparing the move to cutting a pie into more pieces. But the data seems to prove it works:
Bonus: Here’s a boppy old-school stock rap. “A company is kinda like a pie (pie!), a stock is a slice that you buy (buy!).”