In June 2024, Nvidia did a 10-for-1 stock split: one share worth about $1,200 became ten shares worth about $120 each. Overnight, the same investors owned ten times as many shares — and not one cent more in value. That contradiction is the whole story.
So what is a stock split? It is a cosmetic change to a company's share count that leaves the business, and your stake in it, exactly the same size. This guide shows you the precise math, why boards actually do it, the famous 2024 splits, and the one type of split that should make you nervous. If you are still learning how the market fits together, a structured beginners' course on how shares really work will make everything below click faster.
- A stock split multiplies your share count and divides the price by the same number — your total value does not change.
- Companies split to lower a high headline price and widen the pool of buyers, not to create value.
- Splitting companies have historically outperformed afterward (~25% vs ~9% for the S&P 500), but that is a signal, not a cause.
- A reverse split raises the price by cutting the share count — and is often a warning about a struggling company.
What is a stock split, exactly?
A stock split is a corporate action in which a company increases its number of shares outstanding while cutting the price per share by the same ratio, so the total value of the company and of every holding stays identical. Announced as "X-for-1," one old share becomes X new shares priced at the old price divided by X.
Picture a pizza. Cutting it from four slices into eight does not give you more pizza — just more, smaller slices. A stock split is the same move applied to a company's ownership. You end up holding more shares, each representing a proportionally smaller slice of the same business.
Nothing about the underlying company changes: same revenue, same profit, same assets, same debt. Only the "denomination" of ownership changes, the way a $100 bill can be traded for five $20s.
The split math: why $400 to $100 isn't a discount
This is where new investors get tripped up. When a stock "drops" from $400 to $100 on the morning of a 4-for-1 split, it looks like a 75% crash. It is not. You now own four times as many shares, so your position value is untouched. The price fell because the shares multiplied — not because anything got cheaper.
Here is a clean 2-for-1 example. Say you own 50 shares of a company at $200, and the firm has 100 million shares outstanding.
| What you measure | Before (2-for-1) | After |
|---|---|---|
| Price per share | $200 | $100 |
| Shares outstanding | 100 million | 200 million |
| Shares you own | 50 | 100 |
| Value of your position | $10,000 | $10,000 |
| Company market cap | $20 billion | $20 billion |
| Your ownership stake | unchanged | unchanged |
Source: split mechanics per FINRA and Fidelity investor education, 2026; position values self-computed from the 2-for-1 ratio.
The real-world version looked exactly like this. Nvidia's 10-for-1 took the quoted price from roughly $1,200 to about $120, and holders simply woke up with ten times the shares. What you should do with this: when you see a split-day price drop in your brokerage app, check your share count before you panic — the two moved together.
Why do companies split their stock?
If a split changes nothing fundamental, why bother? Three practical reasons drive almost every one.
Accessibility. A four-figure share price scares off small investors and makes round-lot buying awkward. Lowering the sticker price to double digits widens the pool of people who can buy a whole share. Walmart said as much when it split 3-for-1 in February 2024, framing it as making shares easier for its own associates and smaller investors to hold.
Liquidity. More shares at a lower price usually means tighter bid-ask spreads and smoother trading. That can matter for a company that wants an active, liquid market in its stock.
Signaling. Boards typically split only after a long price run-up. Announcing a split is a quiet way of saying, "management expects the price to stay high enough that we need to bring it down." It is a confidence signal — nothing more, but nothing nothing, either. To see why the business itself is what actually matters, learn how to read an earnings report in 15 minutes; that is where real value shows up, not in the share count.
One overlooked effect: index weighting. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is price-weighted, so a company's influence on it depends on its share price rather than its size. When Apple split 4-for-1 in 2020, its lower price automatically shrank its sway over the Dow — a change no shareholder voted on. Cap-weighted benchmarks like the S&P 500 are immune, because they weight members by total market value, which a split leaves untouched.
Famous stock splits: Nvidia, Apple and the 2024 wave
Splits cluster around the market's biggest winners, because only a soaring price creates the "problem" a split solves. Here is how the ratios of recent high-profile US splits compare.
Split ratios of notable US stock splits (new shares per old share)
Source: company announcements and StockSplitTools split history — Apple & Tesla (Aug 31, 2020), Nvidia (June 10, 2024), Walmart (Feb 2024), Chipotle (June 25, 2024).
Chipotle's 50-for-1 stands out as one of the largest ratios a major US company has ever used — a deliberate move to drag a four-figure share price down to double digits. Nvidia had already split 4-for-1 back in July 2021 before its 2024 encore, and Apple's and Tesla's famous 2020 splits landed on the very same day. What you should do with this: treat the ratio as trivia, not a buy signal — a 50:1 split is not "better" than a 3:1, it just starts from a higher price.
Do stock splits make you money?
Not directly — the split itself is value-neutral. But there is a genuinely interesting pattern in the data around companies that choose to split.
Source: Bank of America research, reported by CNBC (2022 and 2025). Results vary by sample and era.
That gap is real, but read it carefully. The split does not cause the outperformance. Companies split after strong runs, when management is confident and momentum is already in the stock. The split is a symptom of a healthy business, not the medicine. Buying a stock only because it announced a split is chasing the signal while ignoring the fundamentals underneath it.
Reverse stock splits: the red flag hiding in plain sight
A reverse stock split runs the process backward: it reduces the share count and raises the price by the same ratio. A 1-for-10 reverse split turns ten $0.50 shares into one $5.00 share. Your total value is, again, unchanged — but the reason behind it usually is not good.
Most reverse splits exist to solve one problem: the $1.00 minimum bid price that both Nasdaq and the NYSE require for continued listing. When a stock trades below $1.00 for 30 consecutive business days, Nasdaq sends a deficiency notice. To regain compliance, the shares must close at $1.00 or more for 10 consecutive business days — and a reverse split is the fastest way to engineer that.
Reverse splits carry a wrinkle forward splits don't: fractional shares. If you hold 95 shares and a company runs a 1-for-10 reverse split, you receive 9 whole shares and the remaining half-share is typically paid out in cash. That quietly cashes out part of your position, and very small holders can be pushed out of the stock entirely — one more reason to read a reverse split as a stress signal rather than a fresh start.
In other words, a reverse split is often a company on the ropes buying time to stay listed. And regulators have made that game harder. In January 2025 the SEC approved Nasdaq and NYSE rule changes that speed up delisting: if a company has already done a reverse split in the prior year — or reverse splits totalling 200-for-1 or more over two years — and its price falls back below $1.00, the exchange can begin suspension and delisting immediately, with no grace period.
None of this makes every reverse split fatal. But it flips the usual question. A forward split asks, "how do we make a winner more accessible?" A reverse split too often asks, "how do we survive the next 30 days?"
Mistakes investors make around stock splits
- Thinking a split is a discount. A lower post-split price is not a sale — you own more shares, not cheaper value.
- Buying purely on the split announcement. The historical outperformance reflects the type of company that splits, not the split itself. Judge the business first.
- Confusing a split with a stock dividend. Both increase share count, but they are accounted for differently and a large split is not "free" income.
- Ignoring the direction. A forward split usually follows strength; a reverse split usually follows weakness. Never treat them the same.
- Forgetting dividends adjust too. After a 4-for-1 split, a $1.00 per-share dividend becomes $0.25 — your total dividend income is the same, so don't misread the smaller figure as a cut. If you are new to payouts, start with how dividends work and the four dates that get you paid.
And on the perennial "should I buy before or after the split?" debate: the split date is close to irrelevant to long-term returns. What you pay for the business and how consistently you invest matter far more — the same logic behind dollar-cost averaging versus investing a lump sum.
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Trading and investing involve substantial risk of loss and are not suitable for every investor. This article is educational content, not investment advice.