I don't quite agree with this. There's the long term benefit of adding more shares to the market. If the stock price keeps going up, and the shares keep splitting, those folks who have that stock have an increasingly more profitable position. How in the world is this NOT a long term benefit? It IS a long term benefit.
Adding more shares to the market is not in itself a benefit. Not necessarily a hindrance either. It is what it is, adding more shares.
Your key words are if the stock price keeps going up. If the price keeps going up that is absolutely beneficial! The point is, that has nothing to do with the split and everything to do with the fundamentals of the company (again, this is all long-term perspective). Its not the splitting that puts those lucky folks in a more profitable position, it is the fact the stock keeps going up. In the end, and in the long term, a company cannot be more valuable than its worth and at any instant in time, at least with respects to the market place, that worth is a constant. If you spread that worth over more shares, you simply get lower price per share. Sure, you own more shares, but its a wash. Fewer higher priced shares, or more lower priced shares.
Do we even want to talk about how many companies split their stock in the great tech run-up of the late 90s? My only point is that a split in and of itself, does not increase the stock price in the long run.
Berkshire Hathaway is a strange example because reallywho can buy much of this stock besides people who are already rich in the first place? I don't think it really proves the point that splitting stocks don't increase value. It proves that scarcity and DEMAND increase value, though.
Its not a strange example at all. BH didnt start out that high, it grew that high by not splitting (and not splitting its price). The same increase in stock price will happen to any successful company that does not split its stock. Since the number of shares are fixed, the price per share goes up and up as the company gains in value.
And I wasnt trying to prove that splitting stocks increases or decreased value. Actually, just the opposite; Im saying splits have nothing to do with value. Long term value is determined by the companys business fundamentals. Nothing else.
This line also confuses me with respect to you argument: scarcity and demand increase value. I agree about the scarcity part, but splitting stock does not make it more scarce, it makes it more abundant. How is this bolstering the argument that splits increase stock price? And as far as demand increasing value, while its semantics, I would say that demand increases price. Short term. And then the bubble bursts.
"Nothing in life is exlusive. There are ALWAYS variables. Businesses succeed just as much with a little luck as they do with effort. Stock, if properly valued with a balanced P/E ratio (Price to Earnings) can be a determinant of a company's value."
I will concede on this one, nothing in life is exclusive and there are always are variables. But remember, Ive prefaced this entire discussion on long term. A business starting out needs luck just as much as anything else, but luck does not sustain it, not long term. Long term luck is skill. Balanced P/E? Not sure how this bolsters your side of the discussion, as P/E is accepted the ratio of a stock's market capitalization divided by its after-tax earnings over a 12-month period. And market capitalization is calculated by multiplying all outstanding shares by the share price. So from there, it is easy to see that splits do not affect P/E at all. Your numerator (P) will either be the sum of few high priced stocks or of many lower priced stocks. Again, a wash.
"I see no rational explanation for this last statement. Just look at Coca Cola. You can only imagine how many times the stock for this 100+ year old company has split. If you had 100 shares of Coke stock from 1940, they'd be worth more than 100 shares of Coke today as a result of the stock splitting, and of course going up in price as well. If stocks didn't split, they'd all end up just like Berkshire Hathawayout of reach of most average consumers."
Sorry. Not true. If you had 100 shares of Coke (which lets pretend had a no splitting policy, their current price would be outrageous, lets say $1,000,000 per shareI dont have the inclinations to do the actual math, or time for that matter). Instead, since they did split, you have a lot more shares, but each worth a lot less. However, if you multiplied it out, your net value would be $100,000,000 either way.
Your correct; splits make stocks more accessible to the average Joe, and that makes them trade back and forth far more readily. But that does not increase their value or price.
Heres where I think the problem lies: I agree, stocks split because their price has gone up, but the corollary is absolutely not true! Stock prices do not go up because they split.
"History doesn't lie. Well, that's a whole different argument altogether
"
Your right, it doesnt. Look again at the late 90s. In the end, it is business fundamentals and nothing else.
"The long term benefit is that the stock is more liquid. Dell traded 17.4 million shares today, out of 2.48 billion outstanding, or .7% of the company's market cap (~ $700 million). Berkshire Hathaway traded 120 A shares and 6970 B shares (effectively 232 A shares, since a B share is 1/30 an A share) out of 1.54 million total shares, or about .02% of the company. I'd say a few splits along the way makes quite a difference."
Ok, Ill give you whatever it is you are trying to say but Ill have to add two comments. First, comparing the number of shares traded by a computer company versus any other company, on a particular day, only tells you that yesterday, more people were interested in trading Dell than BH or whatever other company you are trying to compare to. I really dont see how splits along the way made Dell more desirable than BH. And let me ask you, which would you rather own? Second, how does a stocks liquidity help its price go up? Again, fundamentals make the price go up.