There's Only One Logical Choice to Be Wall Street's Next Stock-Split Stock, and It's Not the Company You're Probably Thinking Of

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Investors rallied around influential businesses conducting forward stock splits last year.

  • There's more to deciphering which brand-name stock will split next than a high nominal share price.

  • Meaningful retail investor ownership, along with a sustainable moat, positions this widely-owned market leader to become the next blockbuster stock-split stock.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Meta Platforms ›

With few exceptions, investors have had a next-big-thing trend or innovation to captivate their attention (and available cash) for more than three decades. Over the last two and a half years, the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) has served as the primary catalyst that's lifted the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite to new highs.

But AI isn't the only reason Wall Street's bull market celebrated its second anniversary in October. Investor excitement surrounding announced stock splits in influential businesses has also propelled the broader market higher.

A blank paper stock certificate for shares of a publicly traded company.
Image source: Getty Images.

A stock split is an event that enables a publicly traded company to adjust its share price and outstanding share count by the same magnitude. These changes are purely cosmetic and don't result in adjustments to a company's market cap or operating performance.

While stock splits come in two varieties, they're certainly not equal in the eyes of investors. Reverse splits, which entail increasing a company's share price and reducing its share count by the same factor, are typically frowned on by investors. This type of split is usually undertaken from a position of operating weakness and is often enacted to avoid delisting from a major stock exchange.

Meanwhile, investors absolutely love public companies completing forward stock splits. This type of split aims to reduce a company's share price to make it more nominally affordable for investors who can't purchase fractional shares through their broker.

Businesses conducting forward splits almost always outpace their peers in terms of innovation and execution. Last year, more than a dozen prominent stocks, including NvidiaBroadcomChipotle Mexican Grill, and Walmart, completed forward splits.

Thus far in 2025, three brand-name businesses have taken the plunge, and very soon there may be a fourth...

Stock-split stocks are beginning to take center stage in 2025

Although stock-split euphoria got off to a slow start this year, the number of industry-leading businesses announcing forward splits has picked up recently.

Things kicked off with auto parts supplier O'Reilly Automotive (NASDAQ: ORLY) announcing its largest stock split on record in mid-March: 15-for-1. If approved by the company's shareholders during O'Reilly's annual meeting on May 15, it'll take effect after the close of trading on June 9.