Stock Splits Calendar
Track upcoming and recent stock splits across the market.
| Company | Symbol | Split Ratio | Type | Post-Split Price | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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What is a Stock Split?
A stock split divides existing shares into multiple shares, reducing the price per share while maintaining the total value of your investment.
Forward Split Example (2:1)
If you own 100 shares at $200, after a 2:1 split you'll have 200 shares at $100. Total value remains $20,000.
Why Do Companies Split?
- Accessibility: Lower share price makes stock more accessible to retail investors
- Liquidity: More shares outstanding can increase trading volume
- Index Inclusion: Some indices have price-weighted components
- Psychology: Lower prices can appear more attractive to some investors
About Reverse Splits
Reverse splits (like 1:10) reduce the number of shares and increase the price. They're often done to meet exchange listing requirements or avoid delisting. While not inherently negative, they can indicate the company has struggled with a declining share price.