Wall Street’s Final Unstoppable Stock Split of 2024 Has Arrived

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There’s absolutely no question that the bulls are in charge on Wall Street. Recently, the mature stock-driven Dow Jones Industrial Average, benchmark S&P 500, and growth stock-propelled Nasdaq Composite reached the psychologically important plateaus of 45,000, 6,000, and 20,000, respectively.

While a number of factors are responsible for sending the broader market to new heights, including the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution, better-than-expected corporate earnings, and Donald Trump’s November victory, it’s important not to overlook the role that excitement surrounding stock splits has played in lifting the tide.

Image source: Getty Images.

A stock split is a tool publicly traded companies can lean on to superficially adjust their share price and outstanding share count by the same magnitude. Because share price and share count are altered by commensurate factors, there’s no change in market cap, nor is there any impact on the company’s underlying operating performance.

Although splits come in two varieties — forward and reverse — the investing community gravitates to one far more than the other.

The less-popular of the two is reverse stock splits, which aim to increase a company’s share price. Usually, reverse splits are implemented by struggling businesses that are attempting to meet the minimum continued share price listing standards of a major stock exchange. While not all reverse splits are necessarily bad news, the companies conducting this type of split require a lot of extra vetting and, historically, don’t have the best track records.

On the other hand, investors tend to love companies completing forward stock splits. A forward split is designed to reduce a company’s share price in order to make it more nominally affordable for everyday investors and/or employees participating in stock purchase plans. Not all brokerages allow their customers to purchase fractional shares, which is where forward splits can come in handy.

Companies enacting forward splits have a rich history of outperforming their peers and leading with innovation. To boot, an analysis from Bank of America Global Research found that companies conducting forward splits have averaged a 25.4% return in the 12 months after announcing their split, since 1980. By comparison, the S&P 500 has averaged a more modest 11.9% average annual return during these same timelines.

In 2024, more than a dozen prominent businesses completed stock splits, including AI giants Nvidia, Broadcom, and Super Micro Computer, which all executed 10-for-1 forward splits.

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