What is a Stock Split? And Why Do Companies Split Their Shares? - YouTube

Channel: The Motley Fool

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Dylan Lewis:聽Hey, I'm fool.com editor, Dylan Lewis, and on this episode of FAQ, we're going
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to talk pizza and stock splits. OK, I'm going to offer you two different options.
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You can have one slice of a 12 inch pizza that's been cut into quarters, or you can
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have two slices of a 12 inch pizza that's been cut into eighths. Which one do you choose?
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Think about your answer. While you do, let's walk through what a stock split is.
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All companies that are publicly traded have a certain number of shares outstanding.
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Let's say I have a publicly traded company that's worth $1 million, and ownership of that company
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is divided into 10,000 shares outstanding, so each share is worth $100. Now, say my company
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puts up some awesome business results. We released a bunch of new products, those products
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sell really well, and customers are happy. Thanks to the massive boost in sales over
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a few years, the business grows to $10 million in value. Now each share is worth $1,000 at
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this point. As management, I might look at that and say, "You know, that's a lot of money
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that people need to have in order to become a shareholder of my company. I want to make
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sure that the average person can buy one share and become an investor." If that's the case,
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I might decide to do a stock split. Say I do a five-for-one split. One share now
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becomes five, so the total shares outstanding will become 50,000 for the company, and the
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price of each share will go from $1,000 to $200. The total value of the business stays the same.
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The total value each shareholder holds stays the same. The only thing that
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changes is the number of shares and how much they're worth.聽That five-for-one example
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was for the sake of round numbers and math skills. Most stock splits are either two-for-one
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or three-for-two. Now, you might be thinking, why?
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If stock splits do nothing for the value, why do companies do them? Well, companies might decide
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to do it to make it easier for the average investor to buy shares. If someone is trying to save
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$100 a month to invest, they have to wait a lot longer to buy shares if they want to
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buy shares that are priced at $1,000 instead of $50. This was the main reason Apple cited
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for going through a seven-for-one stock split a few years ago. Apple CEO Tim Cook said in 2014,
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"We're taking this action to make Apple stock more accessible to a larger number of investors."
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Companies will also do this because
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there are some special securities, like options, that are sold in lots of 100. We'll talk about
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options on a future episode, but for the purposes here, just know that they generally need to
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be sold in blocks of 100 shares. So if a company's stock price is very high, it requires a lot
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of money upfront to transact these options. Like the previous reason, companies might
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split their stock to make it easier for people to do that.
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One third reason that you'll see companies go through a stock split is that it increases
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the number of shares outstanding, meaning there are more available shares to trade,
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which can help with liquidity.聽 Now, there are actually some companies that
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intentionally avoid splitting their stock. The main reason: stock splits are cosmetic
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changes to a company's ownership. They don't change the fundamentals of the business at all.
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And a high share price tends to attract long-term, buy-and-hold investors, and actually
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makes it harder for people to short-term trade in and out of a company. This quote from
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Warren Buffett's 1983 annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway
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shareholders pretty much sums it up.
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"Were we to split the stock or take other actions focusing on stock price rather than
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business value, we would attract an entering class of buyers inferior to the exiting class
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of sellers. Could we really improve our shareholder group by trading some of our present, clear-thinking
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members for impressionable new ones, who preferring paper to value, feel wealthier with nine $10 bills
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than one $100 bill?" Buffett ultimately caved and created a separate class of Berkshire
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shares in a split, but he's never split the voting Berkshire A shares, which currently
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trade at over $300,000 each. More management teams are starting to think
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like Buffett. In 1997, over 100 companies in the S&P 500 split their stocks. In 2016,
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that figure was down to seven. Executives are wising up to the fact that stock splits aren't
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worth their time, and the rise of brokerages offering fractional shares have made it easier
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for investors with less money to still get into the market. You'll hear people say,
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"Oh, stock splits are a bullish sign, it means the company thinks they're going to keep growing
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and the share price is going to keep going up." No. It's just shuffling around how ownership is held.
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Going back to our pizza example, some people
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might prefer to get two smaller slices instead of one monster piece of pizza. The reality is,
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you're getting the same amount of pizza either way. The same goes for a stock split.
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There may be some short-term movements related to the news, but long-term, shares move because
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of the business results that companies put up, not the number of ways ownership is sliced up.
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Thanks for watching, guys! If you enjoyed
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this video, we've got plenty more like it coming up. Hit subscribe down in the bottom
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right and give us a thumbs up. If you have any questions on things I hit in the video,
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drop them in the comments section below. We love getting ideas for future videos!