Plus, the tech giant I like better [Read this article on our website.]( [Smart Money Monday]  Jun 6, 2022 Amazon Is Doing Something It Hasn't Done in Over 20 Years Today, Amazon is doing something it hasnât done since the dot-com bubble⦠A stock split. If you own Amazon, for every one share you had on Friday, you now have 20 shares. This does not change the value of your investment. If you have an apple pie and split it into 20 pieces, you still have the same amount of pie. So, donât panic if you own Amazon and notice the stock has âdroppedâ from around $2,400 to around $120. You havenât lost any money, and Amazonâs business hasnât changed. You just own more, smaller pieces of the company. - So, why is Amazon bothering to split its stock? The first reason is to get more individual investors to buy it. With the growth of no-fee trading platforms like Robinhood, more Millennials and Gen Zâers are dropping their pennies into the market. Many of these newbie investors arenât working with much capital. Robinhood says its median account size is $240. So, a stock split allows more people with small accounts to buy shares. Bull market or bear marketâhunker down with a nimble portfolio packed with stocks that put money in your pocket month after month⦠[Click here to discover more.]( The second reason to split a stock is employee compensation. Amazon has 1.6 million employees. Last year it doled out $12 billion in stock-based compensation. Of course, many of Amazonâs employees are not eligible for this. But a lower stock price makes the situation easier for the company to manage. - The third reason to split a stock comes back to passive indexing. Or more specifically, the oldest index in the worldâthe Dow Jones Industrial Average. The Dow is a basket of 30 blue-chip stocks. Itâs weighted differently than other indices. The S&P 500 and the Russell 2000 weight companies by market capitalization. But the Dow weights companies solely on stock price. Despite its size, Amazon is not in the Dow. However, its more palatable post-split price may boost its chances of getting a spot. That, in turn, would help support a higher stock price. - Does all this mean you should buy Amazon if you donât own it yet? Amazon has sunk 22% in the past 12 months. But Iâm a bit of an Amazon skeptic. Yes, itâs a massive company. We all order off its site. And itâs investing âthrough its income statement,â which depresses current earnings. But I wouldnât call it a bargain. On a trailing 12-month basis, operating cash flow was $39 billion. Thatâs before $63 billion in major capital expenditures. So, at todayâs prices, the stock is trading for 30 times operating cash flow. The only part of Amazon thatâs making much money is Amazon Web Services, or AWS. It accounted for 74% of operating earnings last year. Meanwhile, Amazonâs international retail business lost money. And its North American retail business put up a razor thin 2.5% operating margin. Amazon might work from here. But there are better, easier ideas out there. - Another big tech company is set to split its stock next month⦠Alphabet (GOOGL)âor Google, as everyone still calls it. Google might have the best business in the world: Search. It dominates the space. And it has a clean balance sheet, with $124 billion in cash and investments net of debt. Analysts expect Google to earn $132 per share for 2023. At todayâs $2,315 stock price, thatâs a reasonable 17 times earnings. Back out the cash, and itâs an even-cheaper 16 times forward earnings. Google plans to split its stock on July 15. Shareholders will get 20 shares for every one share they own. Like Amazon, Googleâs stock split it likely to attract more shareholders. It may also improve Googleâs chance of getting a spot in the Dow. If you want to take advantage of the technical trading elements of stock splits, I would pass on Amazon and bet on Google. Thanks for reading, [Thompson Clark] âThompson Clark
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[I'm sharing my #1 Wealth Accelerator, which could potentially shoot up 1,000% or more.]( [Thompson Clark]Thompson Clark is a small-cap expert and value-focused investor with nearly a decade of experience in financial publishing. Thompson graduated from the Goizueta Business School at Emory University in 2010 with a focus in finance and accounting. He lives in North Carolina. He is the editor of Mauldin Economicsâ free research service, [Smart Money Monday]( . Don't let friends miss this timely insightâ
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