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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. The Stock Advisor service has more than quadrupled the return of S&P 500 since 2002*.

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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

According to the company's filings, the portfolio managers of the fund have a long-term goal of investing in 100 venture-backed technology companies. Some of the more notable positions in the portfolio include fintech start-ups Klarna, Revolut, Plaid, Public.com, Brex, and Stripe. for every $1 of NAV.

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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

It's cosmetic in the sense that a stock split doesn't change a company's market cap, and it has no impact on its operating performance. Stock-split stocks come in two varieties: forward and reverse. The magnitude of this split (50-for-1) is one of the largest in the history of the New York Stock Exchange.

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Nvidia and Broadcom Have Each Announced Stock Splits: These Are the 3 Most-Logical Candidates to Become Wall Street's Next Stock-Split Stocks

The Motley Fool

A forward-stock split is designed to make shares more nominally affordable for retail investors. On the other hand, a reverse-stock split increases a company's share price in order to meet minimum listing standards on a major stock exchange. Shares of the company ended last week at almost $1,496 per share.

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Meet the Stock-Split Stock I've More Than Quadrupled My Stake In This Year (Hint: It's Not Nvidia, Broadcom, or Chipotle Mexican Grill)

The Motley Fool

By comparison, a reverse-stock split is designed to increase a company's share price, often with the purpose of ensuring it meets the minimum listing standards on a major stock exchange. Investors usually focus their attention on high-flying companies enacting forward-stock splits.

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Nvidia Recently Completed a 10-for-1 Stock Split, and These 2 "Magnificent Seven" Members Look Ready to Follow in Its Footsteps

The Motley Fool

Meanwhile, a reverse-stock split is aimed at increasing a company's share price, often with the goal of meeting continued listing standards on a major stock exchange. Although some reverse-stock splits can be long-term winners, most investors tend to focus their attention on public companies conducting forward splits.

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Meet the Unique Stock-Split Stock Warren Buffett Has More Than Tripled His Stake In

The Motley Fool

As I alluded to earlier, most reverse splits are aimed at keeping a company's shares listed on a major stock exchange. But Sirius XM is in no danger of delisting, which makes it unique among companies conducting reverse-stock splits. The cherry on top is the company's 3.7% dividend yield.

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