Big Companies Take A Shine To Stock Splits

 | Apr 05, 2022 02:22PM ET

  • Stock splits are back by popular demand with many major tech-related companies taking the corporate action

  • Firms from other sectors and geographies have engaged in splits, a sign of optimism

  • Ahead of Q1 earnings season, traders might consider eyeing new stock split candidates

  • What a first quarter it was. The S&P 500 notched a lone all-time high on the first trading day of the year, then pulled back significantly—easily into “correction” territory. The global aggregate bond market suffered one of its worst quarterly losses ever as interest rates vaulted and credit spreads widened. A risk-on appetite during the back half of March helped cushion the blow to investors, though. There appears to be some optimism on the geopolitical front and inflationary fears might be in the process of peaking.

    Amazon, Alphabet, Tesla And GameStop. Oh My!

    We spotted more hopeful news: Stock splits are on the rise. People are talking about it, too. High-profile companies like Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) recently announced 20-for-1 stock splits. On March 28, Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), too, indicated it might split its shares again.

    Not to be outdone, GameStop (NYSE:GME) tossed its hat into the ring via a stock split announcement of the dividend variety. GME plans to increase its share count from 300 million to 1 billion.

    An Important Cue From Financial Execs

    Stock splits are often used as a signalling mechanism by a firm’s management team. It’s thought that by splitting shares—whereby the stock price drops and the share count rises—a company tells the investing public that they believe their stock will soon rise back to the pre-split price. Splits can also improve liquidity by allowing smaller traders access to buy and sell, although the rise of fractional-share trading has likely reduced that impact.

    Traditional Splits On Relative Rise

    Wall Street Horizon data shows that traditional stock splits have overtaken reverse stock splits in popularity. We began tracking split events in 2006. In recent years, reverse splits outnumbered those of the traditional variety. A reverse split happens when a company seeks to increase its share price to a more attractive range. A stock price too low might be a sign of a low-quality, high-risk stock and it could also lead to de-listing from an exchange. Across our coverage universe, which now spans more than 9,500 companies worldwide, reverse splits were more popular each quarter from 2016 through 2020.

    Chart 1: Traditional Splits Surged Compared to Reverse Splits in 2021

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