Stock splits no more

Whatever happened to stock splits?

We seem to be in an investing world, in which $1,000-plus, per share prices aren’t all that rare.

According to data by investment research firm Birinyi Associates cited by the Wall Street Journal, the average stock in the S&P 500 Index is now trading above $98–a record.

stock splits

Different Era

That compares with the average range of between $25 and $50 in recent decades.

The Journal points out that only two S&P 500 companies have split their stock so far this year. Only six did so in 2016.

Remember the roaring market of the late-1990s?

In 1997, some 93 S&P 500 firms split their shares, according to data compiled by Birinyi.

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Nickels and Dimes

Back then, corporate boards liked stock splits, in which the outstanding shares are increased by a certain proportion but the overall value doesn’t change.

A 2-for-1 stock split, for instance, would be the equivalent of a company giving its investors two nickels for a dime.

Back in the era of day traders and individual investors, stock splits were usually seen as a good thing, a sign of a management’s confidence in the stock.

Institutional Investors

Today individual investors tend to park their money in index funds and the financial firms that run them aren’t crazy about splits since they tend to increase their trading costs.

Companies also seem less interested in splitting their shares.

The icon of the no-split school of course is Berkshire Hathaway.The company’s A-class shares trade at nearly $250,000 a pop.

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Bloomberg: Berkshire Hathaway BRK.A

Pricey Stocks

Berkshire Hathaway may seem like an outlier, but there are plenty of other stocks with per-share prices in the stratosphere.

A share of multinational agribusiness and transportation conglomerate Seaboard Corp. (SEB) fetches nearly $4,000.

Priceline (PCLN) trades at about $2,300 per share.

stock-split
Source: Wall Street Journal

Takeaway

In the current stock market environment, pricey stocks are more common.

Stock splits are mighty rare these days in this era of index fund dominance.

Unless you have a spare $250,000 hanging around, forget about buying a share of Berkshire Hathaway any time soon.

Photo Credit: Joshua Brown via Flickr Creative Commons