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A company may use a reverse split to push its stock price back over a certain threshold, typically $1 per share, in order to maintain compliance with an exchange’s rules. To raise the stock price.
The free market dictates the price of every publicly traded company’s stock. All share prices exist at the intersection of what the seller is willing to accept and what the buyer is willing to pay.
There is no official price at which a company must split its stock, but the last time Netflix did so was in 2015, when its shares were under $700 apiece. So, it's not unreasonable to think that ...
Arista Networks completed a 4-for-1 stock split, payable Dec. 3, 2024. Palo Alto Networks initiated a 2-for-1 stock split, payable Dec. 13, 2024. There's a good reason investors are so enamored ...
It completed a 3-for-1 split in September 2022, which reduced its stock price to $180 (from $540 before the split). However, the stock has surged 112% since then to trade at $383 as of this writing.
The company did a 4-for-1 stock split on December 4, 2024, and it's up by about 3% since then. Shares are up by 88% year-to-date and have surged by 747% over the past five years.
Its stock price has reached over $700 per share, a range that many investors begin wondering if a stock split is imminent. Meta has never split its stock before, so this is a bit of uncharted ...
The biggest reason why ASML is more likely to wait to split its stock is because the company has struggled lately. The stock is down year to date even as the S&P 500 index has soared this year ...