Visa Stock Split Puts These Candidates in the Spotlight

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Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) will go from the stock with the highest sticker price in the Dow Jones Industrial Average to the middle of the pack after its 4-for-1 stock split. But if it draws more small investors into Visa stock, it can’t hurt.

Visa stock V stock splitOn the face of it, stock splits are silly. The underlying fundamentals of the business stay exactly the same. A stock split is the same thing as making change. A 4-for-1 stock split is no different than getting four $5 bills in exchange for a $20.

That said, stock splits do appear good for market psychology. A a greater number of cheaper shares improves liquidity and possible demand. A smaller investor might not feel comfortable spending $200 on a single share of stock, but $50 is a different matter. That’s why, when companies split their stocks, shares usually get a short-term boost on the news.

Heck, Visa jumped more than 5% on a day when the Dow fell by more than triple digits, and that was only partially because of its better-than-expected quarterly profit.

Visa stock went public at $44 seven years ago and hasn’t looked back. Today it trades at $260-and-change. Breaking up V shares so they go for something closer to the IPO price isn’t a bad idea. No, it doesn’t change anything important, but it does improve the optics.

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) is a great example of this. Before its 7-for-1 split, a single share in Apple went for almost $700. Today an investor can become an Apple shareholder for just $120.

Stock Split Candidates

As much as Visa stock is a good choice for a stock split, it’s hardly the best. There are plenty of more popular stocks with much higher face prices.

The most obvious example is probably Priceline Group Inc (NASDAQ:PCLN). The online travel company’s stock goes for $1,020. But PCLN has been in a downtrend since March 2014, when it topped out at about $1,400. A stock split might be just the catalyst PCLN needs to arrest the slide.

Google Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL, NASDAQ:GOOG) is another stock lots of investors would like to see split … again. Even after last year’s split into different classes, a single share in GOOGL still costs more than $500.

Another market darling the little guy would like to see split is Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. (NYSE:CMG), which is at more than $700 per share these days. Heck, many of the market’s hottest, most popular names look due for splits. Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ:NFLX) shares are running at about $440, while Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) goes for $350. Even LinkedIn (NASDAQ:LNKD) — at $225 — is out of the reach of many smaller investors.

There are no indications that any of these stocks are going to split anytime soon, and that has its benefits too. Splitting a stock into a big pile of more accessible shares is an invitation for volatility.

No, nothing about Visa’s business has changed, but at least a stock split will let more investors participate in its success.

As of this writing, Dan Burrows did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities.

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Article printed from InvestorPlace Media, https://investorplace.com/2015/01/visa-stock-split/.

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