- Recognize the effects of a stock split on the financial statements
A stock split is when a corporation reduces the par value of each share of stock outstanding and issues a proportionate number of additional shares. It also may affect the par value and market price per share, reducing them proportionately. However, the total dollar value of the shares outstanding does not change. No journal entry is required for a stock split.
Often, if a company thinks the stock price is too high, it will split the stock to lower the per share price.
Between 1981 and 1999, Home Depot split its stock 13 times by various factors, and so each original share ended up being roughly 342 shares, but before we look at that in more detail, let’s check your understanding of stock splits in general.