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If You Bought 1 Share of Coca-Cola at Its IPO, Here's How Many Shares You'd Own Now

The Motley Fool

Unraveling Coca-Cola's stock-split history On Sept. 5, 1919, Coca-Cola debuted as a public company on the New York Stock Exchange at an initial public offering (IPO) price of $40 per share. Beverage colossus Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) is a perfect example. Image source: Getty Images.

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1 Unstoppable Multibagger Up 2,530% Since 2009 to Buy in 2024 and Hold Forever

The Motley Fool

Posting annualized total returns of 26% since its initial public offering in 2009, OTC Markets Group (OTC: OTCM) may be one of the most surprising multibaggers on the publicly traded markets.

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Chipotle Is Finally Splitting Its Stock. Is It Time to Buy?

The Motley Fool

Chipotle Mexican Grill (NYSE: CMG) has been one of the best-performing stocks on the market since its initial public offering (IPO) in 2006, but despite gaining more than 5,000%, the stock had never once split. If it's approved, the stock will begin trading on a post-split basis on June 26.

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This Company Is Quickly Becoming a Leader in AI -- and Its Not Nvidia, Alphabet, or Microsoft

The Motley Fool

Palantir is nearly 20 years old, yet it only went public about three years ago. Since its debut on the New York Stock Exchange in late 2020, Palantir stock has been no stranger to the highs and lows of public company scrutiny.

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Want to Invest Like a Billionaire? This ETF Lets You Buy SpaceX, OpenAI, Stripe, and Other Unicorns for Less Than $50.

The Motley Fool

The majority of investors don't have a chance to participate until a unicorn pursues an initial public offering ( IPO ). It's important to realize that the Destiny Tech100 was not trading on public exchanges in 2023. In fact, shares didn't hit the New York Stock Exchange until earlier this year.

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Wall Street's Next Stock Split -- a 27,000%-Gainer Since Its IPO -- Is Imminent, and I'm Not Talking About Broadcom

The Motley Fool

Meanwhile, a reverse-stock split aims to increase a company's share price, usually with the purpose of ensuring that it meets the minimum continued listing standards for a major stock exchange. Although both categories can produce long-term winners, most investors tend to gravitate to companies conducting forward-stock splits.

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Quilvest floats portfolio company BBB Foods on NYSE

Private Equity Wire

Quilvest Capital Partners (Quilvest), a dedicated global mid and lower mid-market alternatives investment manager with over $7bn in AUM, has successfully listed one of its earliest portfolio companies, BBB Foods (BBB), on the New York Stock Exchange.