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I feel like you're confusing a stock split with a stock offering. A stock split is when all share holders get 5 shares for every 1 they had (or a 7:1, or even 2:1). If I have 10% of a company with 10,000 shares, I'll still have 10% equity of the company with my (now) 70,000 shares.
Stock splits are typically a precursor to dividend (or increase in dividends). I don't remember the exact study but the price of a stock goes up after a split because the market takes the split as a "positive signal" for dividend increase.
My understanding is that if I buy 20 shares at around 120, OR if I buy a whole stock at full value before the split and it then split 20 - 1, over the long term, each of those 20 shares has the potential to increase back to its full value.
I'd say its positive. Boards will have a preference for the range that their stock trades in. If the stock goes above that range, they'll authorize a split to bring the price back in line. So, it should be a trailing indicator of good performance.
Play around with 10% if you want and just buy small amounts or fractional shares. Your 10% is very likely to underperform your index funds over the course of a few years. The most secure path to financial security is to invest at regular intervals in index funds.
Reply. ThatStockGuy. •. The Class C stock without any voting rights will be worth less over time, but you can still maintain your split cost basis at a lower level now if you keep it. If $UA is a long position in your portfolio, and not a trade, then the share ownership shouldn't be too big a deal.
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