By Michael Wursthorn
The stock splits of Apple Inc. and Tesla Inc. take effect
Monday. These change the stock price and not much else, but they
can be confusing anyway.
Stock splits rarely happen these days. Once nearly a given when
shares topped $100 or so, stock splits have all but disappeared
from the corporate playbook. Stock splits by companies in the
S&P 500 faded from prominence after the dot-com bust in 2000,
while those by companies in the Dow Jones Industrial Average are
even less frequent.
Here, The Wall Street Journal tackles the ins and outs of stock
splits, from how they work to why they happen less often.
What is a stock split?
Each company shareholder at the close of business on the day the
stock split goes into effect will receive additional shares for
every share they hold. If a company announces a 4-for-1 stock
split, the shareholder will get three additional shares. The price
of the original share will be divided by four, so that a share
trading at $400 would trade at $100 after the split.
Stock splits help entice investors who might be put off by a
high share price. But that might be less relevant now than in the
past. Brokerages such as Charles Schwab Corp. give clients the
option of buying a fraction of a share for as little as $5, opening
up a range of pricey stocks to mom-and-pop investors.
What happens to the company's dividend?
It depends on what the board decides. If the company holds its
dividend steady, its next payout would split along the same lines
as the stock -- a dividend of $1 after a 4-for-1 stock split would
be 25 cents.
What happens to options bets?
Options contracts owned at the time of the split are
recalculated through a process known as "being made whole." The
Options Clearing Corp. has rules and procedures in place to modify
contracts so that the holder isn't affected by the split. The
contract is adjusted to reflect the new price and number of shares,
but its value remains the same.
In a 4-for-1 split, a call options contract that covered 100
shares with a strike price of $100 each would cover 400 shares with
a strike price of $25.
What happens to fractional shares of companies that split?
Again using the example of a 4-for-1 split, investors who hold
less than one share ahead of the split will receive three
additional fractional share equivalents. An investor holding half a
share before the split will end up holding two shares after the
split. An investor holding a quarter of a presplit share will end
up with one share afterward. Anyone with less than a quarter share
will hold a fractional share following the split.
What does a stock split mean for the company?
Other than a lower stock price and more shares outstanding,
mostly nothing. Splits don't affect a company's value, although
they have a history of generating a short-term pop in a company's
stock price.
Stocks in the S&P 500 tend to rise 5% in the year following
share splits, including 2.5% immediately following the
announcement, according to research from Nasdaq Inc. on splits
between 2012 and 2018.
Recent gains have been bigger in some cases. Shares of Apple
have risen 30% since July 30, when the company announced its split,
while Tesla's stock has added 63% since the Aug. 11 unveiling of
its plans. Many investors say the outsize reactions to those splits
reflect factors including novice traders' embrace of technology
favorites during a year of pandemic-related disruption and the
perception that a stock split ratifies a firm's perceived
competitive strength.
What does this mean for the stock market?
In most cases, stock splits have no impact on the broader stock
market. The S&P 500, the index most closely followed by many
investors and portfolio managers, is weighted by firms' market
value, so a split has no impact. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
is a different story. A stock split won't shave any points from the
blue-chip index, but it will make a splitting stock less
influential in it.
The Dow is a price-weighted index, meaning the higher the share
price, the bigger the influence that stock has over the index's
daily price swings. In addition to causing the stock to have a
smaller role in the Dow's moves, the change could affect the
performance gap between the 30-stock index and the broader S&P
500.
How popular are stock splits now?
Splits certainly don't seem to be in vogue despite the moves at
Apple and Tesla. About 41% of the stocks in the S&P 500
currently trade above $100, the level that conventional wisdom once
held would spur executives to consider a split. Three companies in
the S&P 500, including Apple, have unveiled plans for share
splits in 2020. That is down from 102 companies in 1997 and seven
in 2016, according to Schwab. Tesla isn't a component of the
index.
And several stocks that haven't split in recent years have
continued to rally. Amazon, for instance, hasn't split its stock in
more than two decades, and its shares have climbed to $3,400. Two
of Alphabet's share classes trade above $1,600.
Even bigger is Berkshire Hathaway. Its Class A shares trade
above $325,000. Another class it created in 1996 to help encourage
more participation by individual investors trades above $200 and is
in the S&P 500. Berkshire split shares of that second class in
2010.
Why were stock splits more popular in the past?
Companies were more likely to split their shares in the past in
part because of the mechanics of trading. Trading wasn't powered by
fast-moving digital systems and was costlier to small investors.
Buyers got better prices if they were willing to buy round lots of
100 shares rather than so-called odd lots, which carried steeper
commissions. A share split helped keep stock prices in check for
investors who were willing to buy blocks of 100 shares at a
time.
Commissions largely don't exist anymore at most do-it-yourself
brokerages, such as Schwab and TD Ameritrade Holding Corp.,
eliminating that concern. Still, most institutional investors
continue to prefer blocks of shares since the price often quoted on
an exchange is for a round lot, according to Phil Mackintosh,
Nasdaq's chief economist.
Target Corp. said on a June earnings call that advances in
trading technology and free commissions have made stock splits less
necessary. PepsiCo Inc. dismissed the idea in May, blaming
administrative costs that it said would outweigh any potential
benefits.
What options do investors have for high-priced stocks that don't
split?
They have three options: paying up; buying shares of other firms
that trade for less; or purchasing a fraction of a share, an
alternative recently offered by some retail brokerages.
But fractional shares come with a caveat: Buyers don't get the
actual share. Instead, the brokerage does, and investors have a
right to whatever portion they agree to buy -- which means
proportional dividend and voting rights, among other things.
Write to Michael Wursthorn at Michael.Wursthorn@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 28, 2020 08:22 ET (12:22 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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